Purrling Reef II

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Sometime in the early morning of December 27th my cat Keplar jumped on the acrylic lid of my Fluval 13.5 aquarium and it got wedged in the glass, which exactly none of my kinsmen noticed as they got up the next morning. In a horrific instance they became aware of the problem however as the glass ruptured catastrophically with a tremendous BANG like a gunshot and I awoke to frantic shouts. My brother J turned off the house's power breakers, ending the immediate threat of fire or electrocution and I hurriedly began evacuating my animals into a bucket after showing my other brother how to work the siphon hose.

After getting my livestock to safety and setting them up with an air pump I quickly salvaged my live rock and sand, taking care to stick the end of the one rock occupied by coral into another bucket, never imagining that it would actually survive (it did!)

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Thankfully my brother gave me $100 for Christmas, so with that, my weekly $50 pet needs budget and $40 I got from an odd job I was able to purchase a Marineland 30 gallon aquarium from my LFS.
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Lacking money being absolutely flat broke and having loved the common sense AIO aquarium design of my old tank I borrowed $20 from my dad for aquarium silicone then with a spark of inspiration, I sawed the sump compartments out of the old Fluval tank with a serrated kitchen knife (which has since been thoroughly bleached.)
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Then, after a brief employment of my dad and his table saw to cut some old acrylic I glued the sump into the new (deeper and wider) tank with the previously mentioned silicone. (I then spent several hours removing the excess silicone although it still looks a bit like smeared snot so I might paint a black stripe - with painter's tape - on the outer glass to hide it.)
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It ain't pretty but it works.

The silicone requiring a 24 hour curing period I couldn't add any of the water I had salvaged yet but I still had fun arranging my existing rockwork on the side of the tank which hadn't just suffered my bizarre ingenuity.

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The ugly green gunk is the epoxy which previously glued my old tank's rockwork together.
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The old Purrling Reef - rest in peace, little tank.

Immediate crisis averted I transferred my livestock into a larger bin with the coral-populated rock and added my smaller, fully submersible Fluval heater on top of the airstone for oxygen and a temperature probe so that I could make sure that everyone was alright still. I offered food but not even the clownfish were interested; not surprising. I covered the bin with towels and fortified it with my mesh cat-proof lid (which I had previously removed from the old aquarium and replaced with the acrylic lid because the water wasn't staying warm enough. This is what led to this disaster.)
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Finally confident that my animals were safe and least somewhat comfortable, I let myself do other stuff and relax for the first time in many hours.

The next day I started adding water! (Only to realize that I was pretty much completely out of salt. Insert stress here.) After several hours with my larger heater the water in the new aquarium was finally warm enough to support life so I methodically introduced my livestock after drip acclimating them.

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Jewel the yellow tailed damsel wasn't found. Considering that I was able to catch her with my hand the day before and she had been extremely pale with stress I suspected that she was now dead... and the next day I discovered that I was correct.

Above was the best picture that I ever caught of her. I'll always be grateful to her; I swear that she saved my first clownfish Moby from depression in the months before I introduced Moby's black snowflake mate, Cousteau.

Apart from the vast majority of my old reef's massive population of copepods though I managed to save all of my other livestock, including my rasta zoanthid coral! (Yeah I know I said I would never keep zoas but somehow it happened anyway.) I even managed to save the rose bubbletip that I had only had for a week! (AND the bizarre little hitchhiker mussel which I have kept!) This victory is probably more luck than any skill on my part but I'm still proud of it and happy with how I responded to this disaster.

Plus, my animals really seem to like their much bigger new home! Obviously it still needs many things, like a bigger heater, a powerhead, a proper lid and another light, but hopefully I'll get there soon. I managed to get the saltwater deep enough to circulate and my filter pump is mostly submerged so Purrling Reef II is secure for now. Next Friday I will be able to buy more salt with my dad's help and soon I will hopefully be able to buy a couple more fish.

I found my watchman goby Clyde's reaction hilarious when I released her.
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"Wh.... where the heck am I?"

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"Space... there's so much space!!!"

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"HOLY SHRIMP!"
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...and with that, she zipped off to explore and claim herself a new den. (It quickly became apparent which rock island was her new home due to the distinct radius of clean sand surrounding it. Earlier today I confirmed the location of her den when I saw her pop out from under it on several occasions.)

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Moby (left) and Cousteau (right) also seem extremely happy with their new home!
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Even my pair of ridiculous nassarius snails appear happy.

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The baby bubbletip Scylla, who is doing just fine despite her ordeal! (No, I don't plan on naming her future descendants.)

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Onwards to a brighter future in 2024!
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The adorable but terrible perpetrator of this disaster, Keplar, who has largely already been forgiven for his crime. IMG_2357.jpeg IMG_2360.jpeg
 
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Barncat

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So, what animals will I be adding? Do I have a revised stocklist? Yes!

- Royal gramma
- Green clown goby
- Sixline wrasse
- A bicolour or striped blenny or another sandsifting goby? (I think it might be okay since Clyde appears to only have time for overseeing one half of the reef.)
- A sandsifting starfish
- A purple pincushion urchin (why does everyone seem to favour tuxedo urchins? I think the pincushions are cuter!)
- A green bubbletip anemone.
- Possibly a second blue eyed hermit crab.
- Possibly a lemon damsel or other captivebred damsel.

My coral plan is the same (LPS and softs) but with more room I can adopt soft corals now!

Until I get a second light and get my mounting system/new lid figured out I will only be focusing on the rock island closed to my sump area where there's currently light. It will be dominated by soft corals, peaceful LPS like blastomussas and favites, and zoanthids. The other big island will be a euphillia haven since I really love torches, hammers and frogspawns!

I am contemplating adding more rockwork at the rear of the tank.

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Last weekend I managed to trade some supplies that I didn't need for a rock absolutely covered in rose bubbletip anemones! This rock brought with it a lot of life including multiple baby green serpant stars, blue discosoma mushroom corals, and non-pulsing xenia!❤️

My captivebred A. ocellaris clownfish have no idea what to do with the anemones yet (perhaps that's generational knowledge,) but they and my yellow watchman goby Clyde seem very happy! (Skitter the blue eyed hermit crab too.)

The nem rock also came with a couple of pests - at least one aiptasia, an astarina starfish and what I believe to be vermitid snails. I embrace diversity though so I'll be acquiring a sixline wrasse as soon as I'm done introducing the more peaceful species on my stock list.

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Update! Purrling Reef is now over a year old, not counting the age of its container.

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It's non-coral livestock currently are:
- Moby and Cousteau the ocellaris clownfish
- Clyde the yellow watchman goby (currently several months MIA)
- Skittle the citron clown goby
- Mer the blue green chromi
- Convict the striped fang blenny
- Tangelo the sixline wrasse
- Doughnut the tuxedo urchin
- Peridot the emerald crab
- 4x nassarius snails (one is a baby born on my reef!)
- 2 bumblebee snails
- 1 gold ring cowrie snail
- unknown number of turbo snails
- a small hoard of bubbletip anemones
- an unknown number of spaghetti worms

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Coral!:
- 5 or 6 different species of zoanthid (I've fallen for them hard lol)
- Mint tipped hammer coral
- Purple tipped hammer coral
- Purple-with-pink-tips torch coral (no clue what its morph is called)
- Duncan coral
- Mint candy cane coral
- Purple blastomussa
- Montipora (no idea of its variety but it is orange)
- Disco Cyphastrea (Fragbox propigates this one, not sure if this is its full name at the moment)
- Spaghetti coral
- Blue Ricordea mushrooms
- A glorious field of green star polyps
- FAR too many non-pulsing xenia (gonna see if I can give some to my LFS, it's gone nuts.)

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Equipment Editions/Adjustments:

- I added actinic lighting! Yay! (LEDENET light bars, found them on Amazon, my corals seem perfectly happy with them so I might rig in some white light bars too and decommission my NICREW light altogether.)

- I filled up most of the sump compartments with lava rock for more biological filtration/copepod habitat. I'm not sure if this has actually helped or anything.

- I made adjustments with more acrylic to the sump to prevent fish from jumping in there and prevent water flowing into the intake compartment from accessing the other compartments.

- a DIY acrylic and mesh lid of my own design

- Living in a semi-desert valley I purchased a chiller and added it; it's done a great job at keeping my fish and corals happy in the awful summer heat that we get here.

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Current problems:
- Green hair algae, likely because with the current filtration design it's a little difficult to access the pump for maintenance, which also may not be strong enough for the 30 gallon mass.

- My sand bed isn't the cleanest looking, despite my nassarius snail army and Clyde the yellow watchman goby (who is MIA, possibly dead.)

- Clyde the watchman goby is a big problem - she keeps killing fish that I add and on multiple occasions I witnessed her lunging at new fish. I regret adopting her; a algivorous blenny would have been a far better choice! Fortunately for me (not her,) I am starting to think that she might be dead as it has been several months since I last saw her.

- Aiptasia; after failing to introduce a molly miller blenny and two peppermint shrimp I finally bought some Joe's Juice and it worked! (Well, on the biggest one - I need to try again on my other aiptadia nems. I'm still new at this!)

- Bubbletip anemones everywhere possibly stinging my corals!

- My aquarium stand is too short which allows Keplar to 'hunt' my fish. I really dislike him doing this! (Not to mention it scares my poor fish.)

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Problem Solutions I'm Planning/Using:

- A breeder box enclosure for the army of bubbletip anemones, at least until I can eventually someday build a different tank for them. I looove my bubbletip nems but I am concerned about them not playing nice with my corals!

- I am running GFO in my filter against the hair algae but so far I really haven't seen a difference. I'm also running carbon, zeolite, purigen, foam, and hypersorb. I need to refresh the purigen and hypersorb but I haven't had a chance yet.

- Once again I'm now using Joe's Juice against the aiptasia; thankfully this is a solution that I can afford!

- I plan on entirely replacing my sump compartment style filtration with a Seachem Tidal Power 110 which will be a LOT easier to maintenance for me. I really like the design of these filters! And, if a 110 seems a bit overpowered, well, that's because...

- I plan on upgrading to a 75+ gallon aquarium ASAP so it makes no sense for me to buy equipment which only suits my current 30 gallon capacity. My livestock need more space and seperation between the various coral islands; I also want a tank that's big enough so that I can adopt a kole or tomini tang because I'm tired of my limited options for algivorous fish! I live in a mobile home though so I don't feel like I can go over 100 gallons in weight. 75 gallons is about 600 lbs and gives my livestock enough space to be happy, plus lets me adopt that tang plus a coral beauty angelfish. However, I am dirt poor so this might take a while. I'm contemplating using leftover foam board insulation for aquascaping as I can carve it with my dremel and then coat it in silicon/aragonite or oolite sand. (I also thought of making DIY reef rock using Quikrete but given that it would be best to make my tank as light as I can the foamboard seems like a better idea - plus there's less materials that I have to buy for it.)

- I plan on building (or buying/finding second hand,) a properly tall aquarium stand for the 75 gallon which will bring peace to my household between my fish and my hyperpredatory cat Keplar. It'll be tall enough that he can't place his front paws on any glass any longer.

- I'm going to place the new tank beside our air conditioner to make sure it stays cool in summer (chiller will still be in use too of course!)

- I plan on buying a new heater rated for over 75 gallons ASAP too. It'll probably be another Eheim Jäger but I also rather like the Aqueon Pro ones which are made of metal with no glass! (I would prefer a fully submersible heater like this!)

- In the meantime on the cat issue: I plan on getting a Ssscat device which will make a nasty hissing sound whenever Keplar gets near it and putting it by my tank. For now I also have plastic spike mats and double sided tape traps out with the intention of preventing Keplar from treading too close to the aquarium.

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Anyway, this is how Purrling Reef is currently doing! You'll have to forgive me for not posting many pictures at this time but I'm out at our cabin where the signal is poor and there's no wifi. Since Keplar is out here too my fish have have had a lovely long summer vacation from his scary feline presence.
 
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Look who has been found! Turns out Clyde the yellow watchman goby decided to jump into my filter sump compartments and regretted her choices in life.

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She's like "Please get me out of here, oh guardian human/giver of food." I had to shine one of my light bars on her in order to photograph her.

Since she had not been the best reef citizen and she was trapped there I called my LFS to see if they would take her. They would, but only as a surrender, which honestly I just don't find fair considering that they are just gonna turn around and sell her for $30-$40 CAD. Plus I'm disabled so this hobby is particularly hard on me financially, I have to find odd jobs in order to afford it so even just $20 worth of snails would've been appreciated, but nope.

So Clyde, perfectly healthy still, was released back into the reef and I was quickly reminded of why I honestly love her as she paused to look back at me, almost as if saying "Thanks for the save, giver of food! I missed my reef!"

She reminded me again last night as I left the house by comfortably staying outside of her den in my presence and asking for food, then eating quite a lot of it practically out of my hand (but not quite - she's not that comfortable with me, not like my beloved clownfish Moby and Cousteau.)

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And she's actually looking more yellow now, so maybe Clyde is a he? I started thinking Clyde was a girl because her colours were so dull, a silvery-yellow rather than gold.

Anyway, I no longer have any plans of rehoming Clyde. She may be Purrling Reef's kraken but she's an awfully cute kraken!

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Instead I might see if her adventure has made her amenable to the addition of a lawnmower blenny since my LFS rarely ever has algivorous snails. Nassarius snails? They weirdly usually have those. Algivorous ones of any species? Lol nope.

My #1 priority though is filter upgrading; Clyde brought to my attention (through her annoying antics when I was catching her) that the water in my sump needs much better corralling - right now it isn't being properly forced through my filter media and instead can pretty much go wherever it wherever it wants including straight back out into the aquarium. Which probably definitely has something to do with what I now believe to be a very healthy population of turf algae on my rocks.

A simple piece of scrap acrylic will quickly fix this issue thankfully - I just need to make time to cut it. And buy more cyanoacrylite.

Speaking of acrylic I'm now seriously researching building the next container for Purrling Reef out of it! I still have a LOT of questions which need answers but I know that on R2R I'm already in the best place possible to find them.❤️

At the moment I'm contemplating building a 65 gallon 1.5' wide by 2' high and 3' long tank whose water will weigh around 550 lbs (not sure yet what the tank itself would weigh but somewhere 50% the weight between a glass 60 gallon and a 75 gallon. Maybe a 100 lbs? I need to go under my mobile home and take a look at its bracing, because it would be awesome if I could go even bigger.

Anyway, there's my current update! Clyde is alive and I have illusions (delusions?) of acrylic grandeur!
 
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Update time! So, thanks to an LFS I was able to purchase a used Seachem Tidal Power 110 HOB filter and this puppy has changed everything for the better! This filter previously ran the LFS guy's captivebred tanks and it's already doing a tremendous job in my 30 gallon reef but installing it - as well as uninstalling my previous uneffective DIY AIO sump filter setup - was a bit of an ordeal.

First, let me explain why I wanted to change my filter setup:

1. It just wasn't effective at all and I was constantly trying to block the flow between compartments to make it better. I had thick turf algae galore and while I had tweeked my lighting to a place where my hammer corals looked super happy, the turf algae was still running rampant, killing coral polyps if I wasn't fast enough in my weekly attacks. (By attacks I mean taking a solid hour or three to pick hair algae off of my rockwork by hand.)

2. Because the pump was so difficult to pull out to maintenance the flow was terrible. What made it even more prohibitive was that the sump/pump setup originally came from my Fluval 13.5 which had had most of the equipment stolen from it including the pump tube's fittings which meant that every time I had to service my filter I had to have aquarium epoxy on hand to get it back into place, but being financially challenged, I don't always have epoxy or even superglue just readily on hand. Having ADHD and therefore a considerable ability to procrastinate/forget things nigh instantaneously/get extremely distracted - made doing this dreadful chore of filter pump maintenance even harder.

3. I had filled the compartments with excessive biological media in the hopes of providing plenty of habitat for nitrifying bacteria and copepods but gunk just hot stuck in between the porous rocks a lot.

So, tired of my weekly hellish algae removal chore, I researched filters and came across the Seachem Tidal Power series which, with its epic design, draws from all levels of the water column, including the surface, meaning that this HOB filter actually skims! Yippee!

But I'm disabled and therefore dirt poor, so I had to wait until my next quarterly GST cheque came to rescue me from my pit of financial dispair. October 1st 2024 eventually dawned and with it came that depression-lifting cheque which I immediately used to hastily pay some bills, with enough left over for the $60 that my fish guy wanted for his used Tidal Power 110 filter which is now mine!

A few days after finally picking it up, last Sunday, after removing the vast majority of the filter media and setting up the new-to-me filter with it, I used my algae scraper and an exacto knife to carefully cut through the silicone which I had applied to bind the original filter sump compartment into place. I couldn't get the bottom piece of acrylic out so I decided to leave it be and it became an underwater corral for all that biological media. Once I can upgrade my tank I'll be able to transfer this media into the new aquarium and jumpstart its life cycle. ❤️

Here's how Purrling Reef is looking now - crystal clear water with vastly improved currents and happier coral plus presumably happier fish. I now have my Hygger powerhead on a timer so that it turns off at night to give my fish a break so that they can sleep.

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Also, the media corral is proving to be a great place to hold coal frags, like my disco cyphastrea and mint candy cane corals which are recovering from algae and non-pulsing xenia attacks. I'm currently working on giving away the xenia and bubbletip anemones to other reefers because honestly I just don't want to deal with them anymore.

Yesterday I traded some of the xenia, bubbletip nems, and a few zoa polyps for a kenya tree leather, a nepthea leather, and... Lazuli, my new female blue devil damselfish who I can't photograph worth poop haha. I had a damsel in my tank before so I'm not concerned about her and I'm hoping that she will befriend my lonely blue-green chromis, Mer.

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I think that it might be time to get one of those yellow lenses for taking pictures of my livestock with haha.
 
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ALSO: thanks to that GST cheque that I mentioned I've begun construction on a wooden aquarium stand capable of holding a 90 gallon glass aquarium. After some review and research I decided to just get a factory made glass tank from Petsmart as soon as I can because my dad will trust it far more; since he's my landlord his trust matters a lot!

In the meantime I can slowly build the tank's stand and brace the underside of our house which will be very easily (if not physically 'easily' accomplished with some sidewalk blocks and standard cinderblocks. The stand is being built by yours truly under my dad's experienced supervision (he's built a lot of buildings,) out of 2x4"s and 3/4" plywood. It'll be finished with paint coated in marine/spar/boat varnish and it will be tall enough so that my cat Keplar will no longer be a threat to the wellbeing of my fish; the plastic spike mats will be decommissioned!

Right now my plan is to use the LEDENET light bars that I mentioned before for lighting, a plan which will hopefully work out very well, but I am open to eventually upgrading to a Fluval Marine light. I simply can't afford fancy lights like Tunze or Kessil - and honestly I think that their prices are supremely gougey and overpriced - but I can potentially save up for a $250 Fluval light.

That being said, a two pack of LEDENET's 24" light bars only cost $50.

So, yeah; progress is being made and I am working on a stocking list for the larger tank! In the meantime I also intend to make some DIY reef rock using quikrete, chunky salt, and aragonate sand or oyster shell.
 

HAVE YOU EVER KEPT A RARE/UNCOMMON FISH, CORAL, OR INVERT? SHOW IT OFF IN THE THREAD!

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