NaH2O
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 25, 2004
- Messages
- 8,568
Again, I don't expect you to know the history of my tank. This had nothing to do with nutrient inputs and controlling the inputs to my system (such as feeding, water quality, etc). It has to do with nutrients in the rock, and the nutrients present from the mass amount of dieing sponge during the cure process. As I pointed out, my rock was stuck in an extremely long phosphate cycle from algae to bacteria...yes I've tried phosphate removers to no avail (and no it wasn't a short term try). Why are you insisting that my algae problems were due to nutrient inputs and not a mass amount of die off?
As was stated earlier in the thread (AND a TOTM winner (12/2003) with a huge and beautiful tank)...
Am I saying boiling is a quick fix to a huge algae problem? I don't think so, and the majority of the people that know me and my tank, know I don't work that way (I am normally slow and take my time with everything to do it right). Some people may use it as such, but for me boiling is a way to get the pieces that were heavily loaded with algae, nice and clean again.
ldrhawke said:I do not see that it will do anything to remove any of what you consider saturated inside the pores. This is the first time I have heard of anyone actually boiling live rock to unsaturate it or kill algae. Other than kill algae and sterlize it, I don't believe it wiil drive off any excess nutrients deep in the pore space.
As was stated earlier in the thread (AND a TOTM winner (12/2003) with a huge and beautiful tank)...
mojoreef said:The high heat of the water removes all surface algaes including corraline, its a great surfcae cleaner. As per the interior of the I believe the high heat and FW (low pH) combo melt and make the detritus and decay blockage soluable and allows it to stream to the surface. I have taken what looks to be clean rock and done the boil and with the bubble action and hot water the ammount of crud that comes out is pretty impressive.
This is just a procedure I used for old rocks that are pure detritus producers and if you dont want to wait for it to cook normal. Also if you have plenty of other rock to reseed it.
It does kill off all life on and in the rock but in the case of rocks of this case that may be a good thing. With algaes, sponges and simular blocking flow and creating diversions for their own benefit, along with constant overloading of the bacterial processing system it give them kind of a fresh start with out really effecting your system.
placing them in a cuastic fluid might also work But I have no experence with that.
Its kind of the same idea as steam striping of nutrients. ALot to do with the low ph, vapor transmission and so on.
Am I saying boiling is a quick fix to a huge algae problem? I don't think so, and the majority of the people that know me and my tank, know I don't work that way (I am normally slow and take my time with everything to do it right). Some people may use it as such, but for me boiling is a way to get the pieces that were heavily loaded with algae, nice and clean again.