So I started this whole build as a result of a Tideline 11.3G AIO cube having a massive die off after a heater went haywire. I learned my lesson, it was my first tank, and I didn't invest in an Inkbird. I'll never do that again, and I have built in redundancies as a result of the sadness from the loss of a tank that was doing so well! (photo for reference the week before it got boiled ) Everything died except for my zoanthids, the single clownfish (Phil), and a rock with some firework polyps. I guess I've been one of those that has had nothing but success with zoanthids and I learned that they can be some really hardy buggers after experiencing 98 degrees Fahrenheit.
The tank looked empty, and going through some heartbreak I did what one does, and I went out to buy something new to heal the pain. I actually went smaller so my remaining coral looked abundant, and I had a good regimen for water changes and testing, ~5 gallons would be even easier. I also wanted a zoa only tank to finally get that garden look!
Anyways, a freshwater fluval evo V was on sale at my LFS and I picked it up liking the nano/pico peninsula look. I brought it back and got to work transferring things over from the 11 gallon to the 5 gallon. Some buckets held the water and live rock, frags, clown, some hermits and snails. I got to work stirring up the sand bed and siphoning out as much as the gunk as I could to help with the new setup. I had never done anything like this before, but my thought was if it's cycled media, why would it make any difference if I use the same stuff in a smaller capacity. Kind of like a big storm rolled through and stirred up the ocean!
I started scooping out the sand, placed it in the new tank, filled it up, and ran the same bio/chemical/and mechanical filtration in the new tank plopped in the main area while the sand and fine particulates settled and accumulated in the filter media. I had a heater and wavemaker running in the bucket to keep things happy for the first day, then made the transfer over to the new tank. I scaped as well as I could with the existing rock and zoanthids that had grown out over the last year, and added in some other cured rock I had to get the scape finished.
After a couple of days in the new setup things were starting to open up a bit more and not look so ticked off after having been nearly boiled. Polyp extension and colors were coming back!
Now Phil was definitely showing signs of being unhappy after living for nearly a year in a really healthy green BTA and I had plans to start another tank, so I went out to get a new small BTA for him to host while I got the new tank setup.
The tank looked empty, and going through some heartbreak I did what one does, and I went out to buy something new to heal the pain. I actually went smaller so my remaining coral looked abundant, and I had a good regimen for water changes and testing, ~5 gallons would be even easier. I also wanted a zoa only tank to finally get that garden look!
Anyways, a freshwater fluval evo V was on sale at my LFS and I picked it up liking the nano/pico peninsula look. I brought it back and got to work transferring things over from the 11 gallon to the 5 gallon. Some buckets held the water and live rock, frags, clown, some hermits and snails. I got to work stirring up the sand bed and siphoning out as much as the gunk as I could to help with the new setup. I had never done anything like this before, but my thought was if it's cycled media, why would it make any difference if I use the same stuff in a smaller capacity. Kind of like a big storm rolled through and stirred up the ocean!
I started scooping out the sand, placed it in the new tank, filled it up, and ran the same bio/chemical/and mechanical filtration in the new tank plopped in the main area while the sand and fine particulates settled and accumulated in the filter media. I had a heater and wavemaker running in the bucket to keep things happy for the first day, then made the transfer over to the new tank. I scaped as well as I could with the existing rock and zoanthids that had grown out over the last year, and added in some other cured rock I had to get the scape finished.
After a couple of days in the new setup things were starting to open up a bit more and not look so ticked off after having been nearly boiled. Polyp extension and colors were coming back!
Now Phil was definitely showing signs of being unhappy after living for nearly a year in a really healthy green BTA and I had plans to start another tank, so I went out to get a new small BTA for him to host while I got the new tank setup.
Last edited: