Hi everyone, another Fluval Evo 13.5 build thread here. I’m a little more than 4 months in, so I figured if I’m ever going to get a build thread done on this it better be now. I have a lot to catch up on, so this will probably come in several posts over the next few days.
As with many others, this is my first reef tank. It was intended to be a Christmas gift to my daughter (which it was, and it’s still in her room), but it has turned into a part time job for me as well. It wasn’t a spur of the moment decision, but it was somewhat rushed, and in hindsight I would definitely have gone with a different tank. That said I’m always up for a challenge, and I’ve had to learn a lot very quickly to keep this small tank in decent shape.
To get going, here’s the equipment and materials I started with, although I've made some changes along the way:
Tank: Fluval Evo 13.5
Light: Stock Evo Light
Return Pump: Stock Pump
Heater: Fluval M50
Circulation Pump: Sicce Nano 1000
Protein Skimmer: Fluval PS2
Rock: Carib Sea Life Rock
Sand: Carib Sea Arag-Alive Sand
Testing: API Saltwater Master Test Kit
We had a trip planned over the holidays, so we made the tank an early Christmas gift and got things set up to complete most of the cycle while we were gone. We returned from our trip and everything seemed to be going as planned. The ammonia and nitrite were gone and I was now measuring NO3. For good measure, I dosed a little more ammonia which was converted to NO3 again in a day or two.
Now that we were a month in (which my daughter swears felt like a year), we headed off to pick up here first fish and a small CUC. She chose a black and white clownfish (I know, I know, probably not the best way to start), and we picked up a couple of hermit crabs and Astraea snails. We also bought some Seachem Stability at the advice of the LFS and started dosing daily to shore up the biofilter.
I can’t find any pics from the initial setup, but here’s the tank after a month when we added the clown:
I haven’t been super happy with the aquascape, but again this was somewhat rushed and the rocks were all that I could find at the time. It’s a little hard to tell, but that’s a cave on the left and the rick on the top right has a nice little point that comes out towards the middle of the tank. Still, I ended up with a fairly flat front face of the rock on the right side so I had to address that later. Also, because the location of the tank in my daughters room will only allow for viewing from the front, I kept the rock towards the back.
Next, against the advice of my LFS, I decided to go ahead and put in a few inexpensive corals. I started with the sale section at World Wide Corals and ordered 1 whammin watermelon zoas, 1 pulsing xenia, and one green birdsnest. I was very confused when two boxes showed up at my door each containing the same order, and I was pleasantly surprised when WWC said “our mistake, you can just keep the extra corals”. Nice way to start. Also picked up a ricordea and a green star polyp frag on a live sale the following week.
So one month in… 8 corals in the tank, one clown fish, and a CUC. Trying to go slow, but also trying to keep a little girl happy who struggles at times with patience. A few early coral pics before I got some decent filters for the iPhone:
Pulsing Xenia, growing like weeds already:
"Charlie" the crab sitting on the new ricordea:
As with many others, this is my first reef tank. It was intended to be a Christmas gift to my daughter (which it was, and it’s still in her room), but it has turned into a part time job for me as well. It wasn’t a spur of the moment decision, but it was somewhat rushed, and in hindsight I would definitely have gone with a different tank. That said I’m always up for a challenge, and I’ve had to learn a lot very quickly to keep this small tank in decent shape.
To get going, here’s the equipment and materials I started with, although I've made some changes along the way:
Tank: Fluval Evo 13.5
Light: Stock Evo Light
Return Pump: Stock Pump
Heater: Fluval M50
Circulation Pump: Sicce Nano 1000
Protein Skimmer: Fluval PS2
Rock: Carib Sea Life Rock
Sand: Carib Sea Arag-Alive Sand
Testing: API Saltwater Master Test Kit
We had a trip planned over the holidays, so we made the tank an early Christmas gift and got things set up to complete most of the cycle while we were gone. We returned from our trip and everything seemed to be going as planned. The ammonia and nitrite were gone and I was now measuring NO3. For good measure, I dosed a little more ammonia which was converted to NO3 again in a day or two.
Now that we were a month in (which my daughter swears felt like a year), we headed off to pick up here first fish and a small CUC. She chose a black and white clownfish (I know, I know, probably not the best way to start), and we picked up a couple of hermit crabs and Astraea snails. We also bought some Seachem Stability at the advice of the LFS and started dosing daily to shore up the biofilter.
I can’t find any pics from the initial setup, but here’s the tank after a month when we added the clown:
I haven’t been super happy with the aquascape, but again this was somewhat rushed and the rocks were all that I could find at the time. It’s a little hard to tell, but that’s a cave on the left and the rick on the top right has a nice little point that comes out towards the middle of the tank. Still, I ended up with a fairly flat front face of the rock on the right side so I had to address that later. Also, because the location of the tank in my daughters room will only allow for viewing from the front, I kept the rock towards the back.
Next, against the advice of my LFS, I decided to go ahead and put in a few inexpensive corals. I started with the sale section at World Wide Corals and ordered 1 whammin watermelon zoas, 1 pulsing xenia, and one green birdsnest. I was very confused when two boxes showed up at my door each containing the same order, and I was pleasantly surprised when WWC said “our mistake, you can just keep the extra corals”. Nice way to start. Also picked up a ricordea and a green star polyp frag on a live sale the following week.
So one month in… 8 corals in the tank, one clown fish, and a CUC. Trying to go slow, but also trying to keep a little girl happy who struggles at times with patience. A few early coral pics before I got some decent filters for the iPhone:
Pulsing Xenia, growing like weeds already:
"Charlie" the crab sitting on the new ricordea: