Pickles
meow
Thanks for ALL the support and help. What is Cyano?
Right now I have a green film that forms on the ends of my tank (on the glass). It cleans off easily with my magnet cleaner but comes back a few times a day. Does this sound like it could be cyano bacteria?
Can anyone in the Spokane area get him a better skimmer? The remora pro won't help the diatom algae issue.
Lady, your not alone!
I lost a diamond goby to suicide"jumped out the tank!"
Two anemone's to not the right light!
One coral beauty to a non protected power head and a sally lightfoot to Idon't know what!
I've only been doing this for about 4-5 months!!
Stick it out !!!!
The payoffs in the end are worth it!
But if you think you can "set it and forget it" your saddly mistaken!!!
Stick it out pickles!!! the beginning the hard part once astablished it gets a little easier!!! whats your lighting schedule like???
I've been following this thread and my hat's off to "reef frontiers" and those that replied.
Pickles what better way to spend your spare time then with a group of "reefers" that really care about someone that they do not even know,except through the "frontier" we call Reef Tanks.
I love it,
T.
I'm in north Spokane also and have been in the hobby approx. 5 years. I recently purchased a used aquarium that had been running for about a year and decided to add a bunch of sand to it, which caused a huge diatom bloom. Having not experienced that for a while, it was very frusterating and ugly. My husband kept trying to convince me to resale the aquarium because it looked so bad and he didn't want the maintenance of another tank, but the brown algae eventually went away on its own. It took like a month and this tank was not "new", just new sand. I recently added a lot of used sand to another tank and it got a small diatom bloom too.
Once the aquarium matures, it becomes more stable, healthy and visually appealing (with maintenance and the right equipment of course). First starting out, my husband and I bought the cheapest equipment we could which worked ok for a fish only tank, but when we wanted to keep sps corals alive, we basically had to buy all new equipment and actually learn how to test our water parameters and keep an eye on what our water quality was like. I have lost all the corals in my tank once, about 80% a second time and have been through coral pests, ich, fish jumping out, etc.
The hobby is expensive and becomes addictive for some or expensive and extremely frusterating for others (long term). A new tank that hasn't matured yet can be frusterating for anyone. The key is patience and educating yourself.
As far as staying in the hobby, that's really up to you. If you're willing to learn how to keep a healthy aquarium, spend the money on it and have the patience it requires for the tank to mature, then it becomes a pleasure. If you don't maintenance your tank, don't learn about your water parameters, mix fish and other live stock that aren't compatible, fail to buy the right equipment, then it can be an ongoing headache as things will go wrong.
By the way, I noticed that you started this post over a month ago, do you still have the diatoms (brown algae) or did they go away?
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