Electrokate's 55

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Electrokate

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 24, 2003
Messages
401
Location
Portland OR
My%20aquariums
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Hi,
I had a thread with my tank's progress but I guess it was too old, all the pictures are gone as is the edit function. So I am trying to do a new thread. The tank is only a 55, I planned on a bigger one but in this economy... ugh. 55 will have to do for a while!

So here goes, the 55 in October 2008. It's been going for a few years now, but I had to leave it with friends while I was in Hawaii for a year. I owe Josh and Susie big time! Only lost three corals in 4 moves, one of which was interstate.

Here is another shot of the tank, which I got the tang in. He is doing great, though he would love a bigger home. If I can I will be moving him to a 180 some time soon, or so I hope.
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Thanks,
Kate
 
Ha ha ha. Susie tried to talk me into her 180 but I have nowhere to put it. Our little bungalow is full! I think I could do a 90 or 110 though since it's the same footprint.
So I may have spoken too soon. Now that my car is encased in ice I have broken one heater and two thermostats on the reef tank and the frag tank heater failed, so it's at 74. That's not so bad, the freshwater tropicals are at 66. Ouch. I do have a digital thermometer with alarm set up on the reef in case another heater blows or sticks. I don't trust heaters without a probe and controller. The snow is pretty but we have ice on the inside of our picture window so I can't see it. Soon as the roads are safe I am going to go buy a new thermostat/controller. Not a cheap import either, though they did last for years. Otto thermostats... 15 bucks and worth many times that if you take care of them. I think the broken heater fried their circuits. RIP Ottos. If anyone knows where I can get another please let me know before I spend 80 replacing it with another brand.
 
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Lighting... My setup is cheesy looking. I have a cheap T5HO fixture from ebay suspended from the ceiling, which was complicated by heating ducts right above the tank. So a series of draped chains was required, and a weight because the light angled oddly when hung. The weight is an old clarinet I made a collage out of. A fan hangs from one end. I also put up a large reassuring button with the phrase "DON'T PANIC", a fake shrunken head, a couple unfinished art projects from the early 90's and a Emily the Strange doll. The Don't Panic message is probably the most important.

It came with 4 65ooK bulbs. They are a nice warm white, and make things grow like mad. The reflector is terrific, I think I can successfully bleach most coral with only 4 bulbs instead of the 8 that come in higher end T5HO fixtures.

Recently I started adding SPS from Upscales here in Oregon, they have some fantastically colorful frags under perfect SPS conditions. These corals still in the shop's water in their bag were held up under my light, where they were a delightful shade of beige. If I was to ask anyone why they browned up I would bet 99% of them would say "you have secret phosphate that doesn't show up with any test kit! Cook or replace everything!!!". It's the light. So I switched half the 6500K bulbs out with URI actinics and things started getting prettier, with no slowdown of the rampant growth. Also will hang a single actinic moonlight here and there to see what will happen, a lot of corals will change color after about a week of that.

Growth is so extremely fast that I had to set up a frag tank and put an ad on craigslist to thin things out. For example, I dropped a frag from the digitata, it breaks easily during maintenance. One landed on this colony of zoanthids, (which grew from 3 polyps I glued to a large rock). This SPS grows 12 polyps a night, I count after breaking sometimes... It grows over the zoanthids, making its base a series of lumps. I don't really know what to do with it to tell you the truth, this SPS is INVASIVE! Lately a large bristleworm has developed a taste for it so maybe that will rein it in some.
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That picture is old, the digitata grew to about baseball size and the base is probably 4" in all directions. All that in 2 months.

Here are two Acans I got from Perry/Ocean in a Box. They were probably 1.5" when bought last fall. They have more than doubled in size, and gained pigment intensity. I feed them mysis shrimp with a pipette about once a week, they get to keep what the wrasse misses.
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Here is the wrasse too. It's a Hawaiian pencil wrasse, in the process of changing from female to male.
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I love wrasses, and this guy is totally underrated. He eats small bristleworms but not feather dusters, coral or shrimp. All my fish bury themselves in the sand at night so the sand is pure white and protected from stagnating. He unfortunately is pestered by the whipfin wrasse, which I will probably get rid of.

Here is a volunteer pocillopora, don't know where it came from.
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It has doubled in size since October, which is about when this was taken. The montipora on the left has tried to overpower it but I snapped that off. The soft coral above it sometimes tries to bend over and take it out as well, and the star polyps behind. I really need to figure out how to rescue it.

This yellow leather is interesting... the store I was working at ordered a bunch of these after getting a couple good ones from a wholesaler. The large batch was supposed to have 6 polyp fiji yellow leathers but we didn't find any, and several of the colonies collapsed soon after arrival. This one melted to a tiny blob, so I trimmed off the black bits and soaked it in lugols for a while, then put it back instead of throwing it away like a normal person. A month later it grew 3 heads, so I bought it. The biggest dropped off as soon as it got pingpong ball size. Then it tossed another lump of yellow tissue. Basically it self frags, which is great, and does not get too large which is even better! With the moonlight on it there is a slight hint of acid green to the polyps, so I think this is what the wholesaler meant by "green fiji toadstool". They must have been smoking the palythoa.
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I like this sponge a lot, and this picture also shows some of the other stuff I have been talking about. Zoanthids taking over baserock, digitata everywhere, etc. The sponge is photosynthetic, it greens up in the light or turns white in shadow.
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This is the softie above the pocillopora, it's from Finn's niece I think. Has a nice bluish green glow to it, leathery skin and small polyps that are eating SF Bay brine shrimp nauplii. Grows like mad, looks great. One of these days will have to frag it. I like the idea of fragging a lot more than the process. This is an old picture, the digitata is so small!
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I wish my cameras could see the flourescence better, they don't see my hydnaphora as green at all. Course most of the time neither do I, it only looks green when the polyps retract due to stress. Figures. Ok, one more photo of that then I quit for now.
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Next I will work on some growth sequence photos. A lot of these are old too.That hydnaphora picture is almost a year old, and it's 4 times bigger now.
 
Looks like I broke a link on that last one... probably was a bad picture anyway. Wish I had a better camera... Anyways here is a purple nephthya or carnation coral type. It has grown a bit since I got it last summer. I do feed newly hatched SF Bay brine shrimp at least every other day and I think most of the corals are eating it.
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Here is the tank on Xmas 08:
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A nice little Acan. These are super easy long as they have food and a safe place to grow.
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Some of the stuff growing on this side is totally out of control
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Another Acan, growing rapidly on all sides
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The acans were getting stung by wandering mushrooms, that is why they are on the sand. I think I will mount them on oyster shells instead. I don't know if sand is good for them, it gets in their mucous.
 
Kate, the tank is looking great, very healthy and natural. I can see the little frag I brought you last month is thriving! I just wish you were closer, but Portland is better than across the ocean I guess... :razz:

Susie
 
Kate, the tank is looking great, very healthy and natural. I can see the little frag I brought you last month is thriving! I just wish you were closer, but Portland is better than across the ocean I guess... :razz:

Susie

Portland definitely seems far during a big snowstorm! Today we have more snow and a entire suburb was told to stay home due to flooding. Your frag is odd, it can change color seemingly overnight after a water change, lid cleaning, or bulb rotation. Lately it does seem to be growing, so I think it's happy. I moved it up.

Here is the purple firefish above his latest hideout. He spends the night with the tang, the day under the orange zoanthids. Pops out to see if there is anything good to eat every few minutes. He's on strike, I ran out of mysis and it keeps snowing every time I get set to go buy more. Doesn't he look mad? Look at that frown!

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Here is the mean wrasse under the mean coral:

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I need to take more pictures. Some day will take a good shot of the whole tank too.
Kate
 
cool firefish,
and right by some of my favorites:)

thanks! I love that guy. He used to be part of a pair but I lost one. They were with Susie for a while. Oddly they would bed down with a pair of yellow head pearlfish. The pearlfish would actually force them to stay deep in the burrow, which you could partly see into because it was against the glass. If the firefish escaped the pearlfish would fight them when they tried to return, but they would get in somehow and then be captives again for days. Very weird. When I got them they bedded down with a pair of flasher wrasses, one firefish to each wrasse at opposite ends of the tank... now this guy beds down with the tang, which has learned to bury itself like a wrasse. Fish are so weird. Makes me wonder if firefish need a buddy species with digging prowess.

If you want any of those zoanthids they are totally outta control and nobody in Portland seems interested. I am going to list them on ebay when the weather is more copacetic for shipping. Those orange-magenta ones are invasive, they grow like mad. Funny thing is a M digitata is on top of their main rock, and the sps is growing right over them. Makes its base all bumpy.
That rock started with 3 polyps I talked Casey out of, they were drifting around loose in a corner of a display. Superglued them on a rock almost encasing them in the glue. Now look, I got about 200 of them. We should be driving up your way soon, would love to bring you some and visit. You still into softies? I got an acid green kenya tree type that is the fastest growing coral I have ever seen. Attaches easily too.If you don't have that I gotta get you some. Again, nobody in Ptown seems interested. I guess they like harder stuff here. Me I don't like banging my head against the wall, it hurts :) So I pick the easy stuff, long as it's pretty and not going to sting the **** out of my other prized corals. In a nutshell that is my super duper secret to success. Aim low, but carefully.
Kate
 
Kate the Great!!! :D Your tank looks wonderful!!! :)

Thank you! I always enjoy your photos, and hoped to have a thread with Hawaii photos like you do, but my camera is kind of cruddy. I did it for a while til I realized it was embarrassing :) They are now here:

http://s109.photobucket.com/albums/n72/electrokate/Snorkeling pictures/

I tried snuba to see if scuba was a viable hobby but it is not. My ears and asthma win. Dangit... So snorkeling will have to do. I am trying to get an Oregon snorkeling club up but apparently it is not all that popular here for some reason. :)

Still hoping to visit the Bahamas. The "reefs" in Hawaii are pretty boring, mainly old liverock, encrusting and finger porites and montipora with a few beat up stomped on Pocilloporas here and there. I saw ONE anemone. On the plus side it was jet black and frilly like the ones in Washington. Very very cool. Those are legal to collect so they don't last long.

Kate
 
I am very sad to report that I lost this fish yesterday. He was stunning. I raised my arm above the tank and he got excited and found a gap in the lids to jump out. I don't know if hitting the floor killed him or the shock later-I put him in a bag and floated him in the dark sump so I could try and find him a better home, he needed more space. After I got an interested person I looked and he was gone. Poor guy was in perfect condition, I studied him and could not find a scale missing or anything.


So RIP whipfin wrasse:

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. I am trying to get an Oregon snorkeling club up but apparently it is not all that popular here for some reason. :)


Kate

Can't see why not. Whats the water temp? Something in the 43 degree range?:D:D


Sorry about the fish. I thought about it, but it was too far.

sent you a pm
 

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