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Unread 06/03/2016, 12:50 PM   #1
Nakie31
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Sk8r

You are so knowledgeable and smart in this hobby I have learned so much from your threads and the advice you have given other can I ask how long have you been hobbyist? Please keep advising us I can't speak for everyone but I love your advice


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Unread 06/03/2016, 01:20 PM   #2
SFish
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+1

I couldn't agree more


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Unread 06/03/2016, 01:47 PM   #3
WiDataTech
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+1. I have learned a lot as well. Your posts are written very well, and easy to understand. Thank you, Sk8r!


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I enjoy long walks on the fairway.

Current Tank Info: 28 gal cube with 2 O. clowns, 58 gal in the works.
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Unread 06/03/2016, 01:55 PM   #4
Sk8r
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Thank you. I started the hobby back in the Jurassic, when my dad got tired of losing me in the feed/hardware store, which had a tiny 3 gallon with aeneas catfish which occupied my attention so I didn't want to leave. Bless him, my next birthday, he got me a 5 gallon Metaframe, sand, catfish, danios, a ceramic grass hut, some weed, and bubbler, and told me it was my responsibility, which I took seriously. I cared for that tank and by the time I was in my teens, I had that tank and a 10, and angelfish; in college, I had a 20, and a 10, and another 10, with a 'rescue' piranha, angels and guppies, not to mention the rescue salamander. I went marine once on my own, and finally went to a 100 with a 50 gallon sump back in the 80's, got out of the hobby on a crosscountry move---and moved in down the street from a reef store.

Ah, me. I started with a 52 which is now freshwater, and now a 102 quarter cylinder damsel reef, which is kind of my dream tank, cranky as it has been. Plus a 5000 gallon koi pond we dug. Back in the 80's we struggled to keep shrooms and palys alive; now we have stony hammer growing like a weed and we're keeping the fussier sps fairly well.

The hobby is constantly changing. When I started the 52, the wisdom was no canopy on a reef; now my 102 has one, because lighting has changed: LED, and no troubles. So whatever you learn, be open to learning a better way, but old knowledge sometimes serves...there are situations where an old Vortec diatom filter could save one's bacon, but the days of crushed coral, where we used to use them fairly regularly, are gone. I cycled my first 100 g marine tank with nothing but dry rock and a gallon of fish store water tossed into the system. Took 12 weeks, but it became pretty. And after 84 days of no fish, the fish store water is no huge threat---so it worked; most methods can get you there, given sufficient patience. Back in the day we feared bristle worms, now consider them essential. We didn't quarantine...that changed. We installed things like sea apples. Really bad idea, tank-nuking mess. So when we say 'bad idea,' some of us have some real vivid memories of why.
The best innovation outside of cycled tanks and live rock is RC itself---the ability to tap into the collective experience of hundreds of thousands of people. Priceless. I ask my own questions, and back comes an answer in hours. We never had that Back in the Day.


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Salinity 1.024-6; alkalinity 8.3-9.3 on KH scale; calcium 420; magnesium 1300, temp 78-80, nitrate .2. Ammonia 0. No filters: lps tank. Alk and cal won't rise if mg is low.

Current Tank Info: 105g AquaVim wedge, yellow tang, sailfin blenny,royal gramma, ocellaris clown pair, yellow watchman, 100 microceriths, 25 tiny hermits, a 4" conch, 1" nassarius, recovering from 2 year hiatus with daily water change of 10%.
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Unread 06/03/2016, 09:01 PM   #5
maddmaxx
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sk8r View Post
Thank you. I started the hobby back in the Jurassic, when my dad got tired of losing me in the feed/hardware store, which had a tiny 3 gallon with aeneas catfish which occupied my attention so I didn't want to leave. Bless him, my next birthday, he got me a 5 gallon Metaframe, sand, catfish, danios, a ceramic grass hut, some weed, and bubbler, and told me it was my responsibility, which I took seriously. I cared for that tank and by the time I was in my teens, I had that tank and a 10, and angelfish; in college, I had a 20, and a 10, and another 10, with a 'rescue' piranha, angels and guppies, not to mention the rescue salamander. I went marine once on my own, and finally went to a 100 with a 50 gallon sump back in the 80's, got out of the hobby on a crosscountry move---and moved in down the street from a reef store.

Ah, me. I started with a 52 which is now freshwater, and now a 102 quarter cylinder damsel reef, which is kind of my dream tank, cranky as it has been. Plus a 5000 gallon koi pond we dug. Back in the 80's we struggled to keep shrooms and palys alive; now we have stony hammer growing like a weed and we're keeping the fussier sps fairly well.

The hobby is constantly changing. When I started the 52, the wisdom was no canopy on a reef; now my 102 has one, because lighting has changed: LED, and no troubles. So whatever you learn, be open to learning a better way, but old knowledge sometimes serves...there are situations where an old Vortec diatom filter could save one's bacon, but the days of crushed coral, where we used to use them fairly regularly, are gone. I cycled my first 100 g marine tank with nothing but dry rock and a gallon of fish store water tossed into the system. Took 12 weeks, but it became pretty. And after 84 days of no fish, the fish store water is no huge threat---so it worked; most methods can get you there, given sufficient patience. Back in the day we feared bristle worms, now consider them essential. We didn't quarantine...that changed. We installed things like sea apples. Really bad idea, tank-nuking mess. So when we say 'bad idea,' some of us have some real vivid memories of why.
The best innovation outside of cycled tanks and live rock is RC itself---the ability to tap into the collective experience of hundreds of thousands of people. Priceless. I ask my own questions, and back comes an answer in hours. We never had that Back in the Day.
ive always read your post talking about your damsel tank, but I don't recall ever seeing a pic of it. do you have any current pics on this site?


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Current Tank Info: 40B Mixed reef
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Unread 06/03/2016, 09:05 PM   #6
BigEZ77
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sk8r View Post
The best innovation outside of cycled tanks and live rock is RC itself---the ability to tap into the collective experience of hundreds of thousands of people. Priceless. I ask my own questions, and back comes an answer in hours. We never had that Back in the Day.
Very true, and your experience has been very helpful indeed. Thank you for taking the time to advise those of us so new to the hobby...along with the many other experienced members who have helped me on my journey to learn and enjoy this wonderful hobby.


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Banggai / Yellow Wrasse / Black Ice and Davinci Clowns / Flame Angel / Royal Gramma / Blue Chromis / LPS (dominated) / Monti's / Softies / BTA's

Current Tank Info: 45G Rimless, Tunze 9004, Kessil A160WE, Gyre XF130, 50lbs rock, Reef Crystals, Phosguard in reactor, Matrix, Chemipure Blue and NP XL biopellets in sump
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Unread 06/03/2016, 09:36 PM   #7
Sk8r
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I realize to my dismay that I never did get a real picture of the tank before the blackout, except this one which only shows one of the fish I lost. Sigh. I'm prioritizing equipment now: generator, better lights, and finally better flow...but I can at least offer this one. And with that I'm going to, with deep thanks for the kind thoughts, close the thread, because I'm, well, not comfy being the focus instead of the fish.


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Sk8r

Salinity 1.024-6; alkalinity 8.3-9.3 on KH scale; calcium 420; magnesium 1300, temp 78-80, nitrate .2. Ammonia 0. No filters: lps tank. Alk and cal won't rise if mg is low.

Current Tank Info: 105g AquaVim wedge, yellow tang, sailfin blenny,royal gramma, ocellaris clown pair, yellow watchman, 100 microceriths, 25 tiny hermits, a 4" conch, 1" nassarius, recovering from 2 year hiatus with daily water change of 10%.

Last edited by Sk8r; 06/03/2016 at 09:43 PM.
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