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Unread 05/12/2006, 03:06 PM   #1
george1098
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secrets to keeping a nice white sand bed!

hi guys
so i love nice white sand beds that just flick the light right back up from powerfull MH lanps (who doesn't?). what are the secrets to keeping a sand bed nice and white so the tank looks bran new?
lets see your white sand beds in mature tanks (lets say 1 year plus)

thanks guys


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Unread 05/12/2006, 03:24 PM   #2
IanInDC
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OH, where are the experts now? This is a universal question!!


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Unread 05/12/2006, 04:03 PM   #3
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Photoshop.


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Unread 05/12/2006, 04:05 PM   #4
akbuuur
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AHHA i think some sand sifters would help?


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Unread 05/12/2006, 04:06 PM   #5
Gooli
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my tank is over a year old and the sand is always white.
here's why:

1. make sure u got good flow - that's a given

2. nassarius snails - the big ones - not the tiny 1/2" ones - i got about 20 in my 90g

3. i also have 2 sand sifting stars (yeah, i know about the eating infauna thing - but i've had them for 1 1/2" years and no problems)


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Unread 05/12/2006, 04:08 PM   #6
akbuuur
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infauna? whats that?(i feel noobish)


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Unread 05/12/2006, 04:10 PM   #7
Gooli
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infauna is all the life in the sandbed - micro organisms and such


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Unread 05/12/2006, 04:16 PM   #8
akbuuur
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ahh cool, im gonna set up a fuge soon so that shouldnt be a problem anyway, do you have any experiance with fiji or miricale mud?


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Unread 05/12/2006, 04:19 PM   #9
Gooli
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no...i have no mud experience.


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Unread 05/12/2006, 04:23 PM   #10
Chicago
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i think on smaller tanks it is easier to keep the white sand. it needs to be turned over ocassionally. if you have larger ruble. it will grow coraline. if you have suger sand the detritus turns it a little grey.

it would be nice to hear that someone i with a large tank over lets say at least 100 gallons has white sand and has nver had to touch the sand in months but yet it is pure white.

then lets ask him or her to tell us the secret.


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Unread 05/12/2006, 04:24 PM   #11
Randall_James
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Only time mine stays pristine white is when nothing is alive in the sand. My large tank has white areas, but the sand is usually all clumped together and although white, un-usable by anything in the tank.


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Unread 05/15/2006, 07:17 AM   #12
IanInDC
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akbuuur, I use miracle mud and I think it really helps algae growth in my fuge... but that includes cyano, unfortunately. I haven't figured out the ideal way to use the nutrient rich environment of the mud without tipping over into the cyano zone.

Just a word of caution.


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Unread 05/15/2006, 07:28 AM   #13
Anemonebuff
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Miracle mud is just that...mud. I would suggest reglar fine aragonite sand instead.

Aggressive skimming, good water motion and a good cleanup crew all help.



My sand stays pretty white, but it does get some brown patches here and there.


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Unread 05/15/2006, 07:29 AM   #14
iCam
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Quote:
Originally posted by IanInDC
akbuuur, I use miracle mud and I think it really helps algae growth in my fuge... but that includes cyano, unfortunately. I haven't figured out the ideal way to use the nutrient rich environment of the mud without tipping over into the cyano zone.

Just a word of caution.
IanInDC, here is a Miracle Mud analysis just for some reading:
Miracle Mud


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Unread 05/15/2006, 07:29 AM   #15
Anemonebuff
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I grow turtle grass in my sandbed.




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Unread 05/15/2006, 08:58 AM   #16
LazyD
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My diamond goby keeps it sparkly white as well as my clean up crew, he just skims above the sand taking in nice mouthfuls of sand and spitting it back out


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Unread 05/15/2006, 09:00 AM   #17
cpage3
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I have white sand in my 55 gallon tank that has been up for three yrs. My sandbed does not serve any functional purpose in my tank the filtration is taken on by the LR in my sump and display (+protein skimmer), but I have been wanting white sand in my tank since the beginning, it is finally here. Here was my plan of action:

For a while now I have been keeping my sand only 1/2-1 inch deep, because i dont like the look of deep sand beds at all. However I do like the look of white sand. So for along time i had brown sand and was not pleased with it.

This is when i decided to just suck up the sand (small amount compared to normal deep sand beds) when it got too dirty. The trick here was not to be completely thorough but to get as much as I could in a reasonable amount of time and a 5 gallon bucket of waste water. Then i would just replace the siphoned sand.

This did two things it removed a very high amount of fish waste and the replaced white sand sparkled. After a while this became habit to me (about every 1 to 2 weeks) and took as long as normal water changes had taken for me in the past. Many times I would rinse the waste sand thoroughly and reuse it.

The only other thing that i think contributed to this is that once every month and a half to 2 months I would clean my sump out sucking up all the detritus that had accumulated (and trust me there was alot) in place of my normal sand replacing procedure.

After about 2 months of doing this I noticed my sand was staying whiter longer and now (about a year later) the only thing that discolors my sand is when detritus and fish waste accumulate in it (turns it a greyish color). This is fixed by just siphoning up the detritus like in a routine water change (for me at least). So as of now I donot usually siphon my sand up and IT STAYS WHITE! Once in a while I will siphon up my sand because I saw the extreme benefit it produces.

I want to make things clear, I am not a nutrient free freak. I by all stretches of the imagination have nutrients and holdfast to the idea that some nutrients are beneficial for coral growth. I still have algae growing on the glass (diatoms, and even a touch of cyano), but it does not grow on the sand. To test whether this was true or not I let my tank go with out water changes for probably about a month and a half and by the end of this period the sand was only discolored by accumulation of grey detritus like stated above.

So there is what worked for me hope it helps

regards
~CAP~


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Unread 05/15/2006, 09:17 AM   #18
Madoktopus
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The best way to keep sand white is to periodically replace some of it. Only way i ever found that worked efficiently.


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Unread 05/15/2006, 10:58 AM   #19
ACBlinky
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The sugar-sized Aragonite in my 30g is as white as the day I put it in, but there's a catch. I have a pistol shrimp, and while he's fantastic at turning the sand over, he has a tendancy to put it wherever he wants so I end up with nice while piles of sand and areas where the tank is BB
Here's a pic from a few days ago.



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Unread 05/15/2006, 12:02 PM   #20
six.line
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I can't believe only one person mentioned a sand sifting goby. The orange diamond back gobies are fantastic at keeping your sand clean.


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Unread 05/15/2006, 12:27 PM   #21
Travis L. Stevens
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Quote:
Originally posted by gooliver
infauna is all the life in the sandbed - micro organisms and such
Actually, that's Fauna (Animal Life). The "opposite" of Flora (Plant Life)


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Unread 05/15/2006, 12:42 PM   #22
reefnewbie54321
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Sand sifting gobies and sand sifting stars will keep your bed nice and white but its only white becuase its no longer live sand, Gobies and Stars both eat fauna (the stuff that makes you bed alive)

nassarius snails
flow across bed
and detrius eating sand bed cleaners

I am going to make a 1 x 48 x 5"tall epoxy sandbed and put it the front of my display and then fill in sand around it so when viewing the tank you see a nice white sandbed but from the sides I can still view nitrogen exchange and moniter sulphide buildup ect. The hard part will be to give it that wavy look that most sandbeds have and not just a flat strip.


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Unread 05/15/2006, 12:56 PM   #23
six.line
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Correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought it was primarily the bacteria that you needed in the sand to keep it alive. Surely the gobies don't eat that?

I know a guy who's got an old school 75 gallon with VHOs, and a sand sifting goby. His sandbed is spotless, and yet his tank is firmly established, healthy, and beautiful.


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Unread 05/15/2006, 02:08 PM   #24
kenny77
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there are 2 way that I know, having a cleaning crew or siphoning

nassarius snails and sandsifting star are a good choice for natural cleaning, but if you have time and some extra bag of fine aragonite sand do what I did. I try to siphon as close from the sand but with out siphoning the sand. ofcourse there were some sand that end up in the bucket. well after siphoning everything that I didn't like (pup). I let the sand and the !@#$ settle down in the bucket, I then siphon back the water and leave about 2-3" of water in teh bucket. then I just add a couple of cups of new sand on tp of the one I siphon. but just a couple, no more than a 1/8" over the old sand


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Unread 05/15/2006, 02:27 PM   #25
Anemonebuff
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Cucumbers and fighting conchs are good too.


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