This week marks the one year tankiversary for my Red Sea Reefer 250 (55 gallons in display). I've learned a LOT in the past year.
1) no matter how much research you do you will not know enough when you get started
2) things will go wrong - do your best to roll with it (good advice for life in general IMO)
3) try to find a local mentor or a reef tank set up/maintenance company for when things go wrong; around month 11 I hired a local guy and he helped me change things up in the sump - it all seems to be working better now (fingers crossed) and my skimmer is finally working correctly!
4) ask questions - here, there, everywhere
4b) you will get more than one answer, they may all be correct
5) bigger is not always better. Yes a big tank is more stable but around month 6 I set up a nano tank that has really been easy to manage and has brought me a lot of pleasure (not shown)
6) you will get frustrated and consider quitting - don't!
Things I still have to learn:
1) how to take and process decent pictures (project for the holiday break???)
2) how to get my corals to grow and not just survive (I may be on the right track now but we'll have to wait and see)
3) patience
Things I wish I had done different:
1) gone slower with buying corals - maybe actually having a PLAN and not just impulse buying
2) live rock and let the tank sit fallow for months while I dealt with bad hitchhikers (I have live rock in my nano and love it!)
3) more sand area and not built my left hand rock pile so high (in the FTS you can't see the peak because it's hidden behind the BTA)
4) gone slower with choosing fish and waited for what I wanted rather than buy what was available - more blennies and gobies!
5) figured out a way to put the sump in another room or the basement so I wouldn't have the pump noise in our living room
I'm looking forward to 2018. Hopefully it will be more satisfying and less frustrating!
1) no matter how much research you do you will not know enough when you get started
2) things will go wrong - do your best to roll with it (good advice for life in general IMO)
3) try to find a local mentor or a reef tank set up/maintenance company for when things go wrong; around month 11 I hired a local guy and he helped me change things up in the sump - it all seems to be working better now (fingers crossed) and my skimmer is finally working correctly!
4) ask questions - here, there, everywhere
4b) you will get more than one answer, they may all be correct
5) bigger is not always better. Yes a big tank is more stable but around month 6 I set up a nano tank that has really been easy to manage and has brought me a lot of pleasure (not shown)
6) you will get frustrated and consider quitting - don't!
Things I still have to learn:
1) how to take and process decent pictures (project for the holiday break???)
2) how to get my corals to grow and not just survive (I may be on the right track now but we'll have to wait and see)
3) patience
Things I wish I had done different:
1) gone slower with buying corals - maybe actually having a PLAN and not just impulse buying
2) live rock and let the tank sit fallow for months while I dealt with bad hitchhikers (I have live rock in my nano and love it!)
3) more sand area and not built my left hand rock pile so high (in the FTS you can't see the peak because it's hidden behind the BTA)
4) gone slower with choosing fish and waited for what I wanted rather than buy what was available - more blennies and gobies!
5) figured out a way to put the sump in another room or the basement so I wouldn't have the pump noise in our living room
I'm looking forward to 2018. Hopefully it will be more satisfying and less frustrating!