AquaCave

His Coral Highness

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Started off about 2 years ago with an old 75 gallon tank I picked up at a garage sale with an old busted-up MDF stand. I redid the facade of the stand to cedar and added in 2x4 supports where I thought the stand would sag. Honestly I took it on as more of a woodworking project than an actual aquarium project, and it sat just filled with water/rocks and no livestock for the longest time. Finally after enough guests asking why I had an empty tank I took the plunge (no pun intended), but never thought I'd get into corals. After having some success with a 16 gallon reef tank in my office I am finally planning on upgrading this to a full-fledged reef tank. I want to eventually switch from a canister filter to a sump (planning on drilling), moving to an in-sump skimmer, and replacing my lava rocks with aragonite reef rocks. The lighting right now is actually a freshwater LED strip light hidden under a Home Depot shop light, so needless to say that is changing as well...

I do still like the red desert sand I originally went with though, and am thinking that hopefully I can still stick with this. The sand is "Jurassic Sand" and the guy collects it from the desert in Utah, if that means anything, and I think with the background gives the tank kind of a cool otherworldly look. I occasionally get a little diatom blood if I overfeed, but otherwise haven't had any major problems with it.

In the time being I am just browsing for ideas on a new scape to go with, as I think the current one is too "blocky," even though I do like having "mountains" in the scape. I think with reef rock it will be easier to build vertically without creating giant rock mounds. Also I like having a negative desert space in the middle, but it is so underused by the fish that I am planning on building more into the center of the tank. Originally my thought process was to create a valley in between two mountains before I had any interest at all in creating a reef tank. I can upload more pics/vids in a bit.

But like I said, this is just the before picture, and eventually I plan on upgrading to a full predator reef tank and would like to create a predator reef tank from my FOLWR setup.

75 tank.jpg
 
Nutramar Foods
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His Coral Highness

His Coral Highness

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Looks kewl

I wonder whats in it to make it redish
Just the natural look of it. I think it looks awesome and it is a very fine sand..

1673564288470.png


Here is an FAQ to the site I ordered it from:
 
Nutramar Foods
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His Coral Highness

His Coral Highness

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UPDATES! Finally moved out of my apartment and I get to upgrade my old FOWLR setup to a real reef system. First step was cutting out a hole in the stand I put together to fit a 29 gallon tank to act as my sump. The stand was originally all MDF and was in pretty poor shape when I bought it secondhand, so I decided to lift it with some 2x8s (or maybe they were 2x10s, it was a few years ago), some 2x4s and new plywood on the inside, and I used cedar than I stained and varnished for the trim. The paneling on the outside is actually red cedar that is meant to be a closet liner, but I think it came out beautifully around the body of the stand with a little varnish on it. The backside of the stand is what you see here, and that I did not refinish, so you can kind of see the before/after in one shot. At this point the stand is upside-down so I could cut out the insert for the sump tank.

Also you can see my little helper.
 

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His Coral Highness

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Here was the part I was most anxious about. I finally got around to drilling the holes (after finding the Gorilla tape that mysteriously kept vanishing). I had a friend on the garden hose and I used painter's tape on the inside of the glass and it came out just fine. After I finished drilling though I realized I may have put the return holes too close to the trim to get the retaining nut on :oops::confounded-face:
 

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www.dinkinsaquaticgardens.com
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His Coral Highness

His Coral Highness

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Eh well I was right, but luckily with a little dremel and a straight razor I was able to trim just enough of the plastic to get the bulkheads to sit flush. It was actually pretty easy as I didn't have far to go, and the plastic is very soft. Plus it is on the back of tank and no one will ever see it (gotta tell myself that a lot of DIY projects...)
 

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Here is the sump setup, btw. I used an Aqueon 29 gallon and the baffle kit from Jax Racks, plus a 5.5 gallon Aqueon tank that I put on a little platform to act as the ATO reserve. The hole I cut into the stand worked out well, and I have plenty of room to work in the sump. Not enough horizontal space to totally hide the ATO reserve in the sump, but it really only juts out about 4-5", and with the tank pushed closer to the wall and with all the plumbing/electrical work behind the tank, I don't think it will be much of an eyesore. Plus it makes it easy to refill with a hose from my RODI water container. Don't mind the silicone job on the baffles, I broke both of my hands and had to do it with my feet.
 

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World Wide Corals
AquaCave

Polyp polynomial: How many heads do you start with when buying zoas?

  • One head is enough to get started.

    Votes: 27 10.6%
  • 2 to 4 heads.

    Votes: 145 57.1%
  • 5 heads or more.

    Votes: 65 25.6%
  • Full colony.

    Votes: 10 3.9%
  • Other.

    Votes: 7 2.8%
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