Barbie
Fishaholic
I have a new customer with a 30 gallon tank. It had 12 pounds of live rock, a bakpak skimmer, and a heavy fish load, with infrequent water changes. On Sunday, I sold her 21 pounds of well cured live rock and they drove it directly home to add to the tank. The tank had been up for 4 years.
Her nitrates tested over 200ppm, but the alkalinity was still over 7.8, and her pH was solidly above 8.0. I recommended a 5 gallon change with premixed saltwater and to repeat that every day for the week to try to get the nitrates down without stressing the inhabitants too badly, since they were used to the conditions
The tank has low level lighting and they had been sold what appears to be a long tentacle anemone. The next morning, they woke up to their anemone inside out and their entire tank full of fish dead. I am trying to work backwards to figure out if there's something I could have missed in trying to get the tank cleaned up and out of danger. I had recommended that they take the anemone back to the place they purchased it, but obviously they didn't have time to. They were told that the live rock crashed the tank by another store, but this rock is well cured and I've sold more than 300 pounds of it to people with established systems with no issues at all.
Anyone have any ideas? They're going to bring me some water to test, but I haven't seen it yet to fill in those details.
Barbie
Her nitrates tested over 200ppm, but the alkalinity was still over 7.8, and her pH was solidly above 8.0. I recommended a 5 gallon change with premixed saltwater and to repeat that every day for the week to try to get the nitrates down without stressing the inhabitants too badly, since they were used to the conditions
The tank has low level lighting and they had been sold what appears to be a long tentacle anemone. The next morning, they woke up to their anemone inside out and their entire tank full of fish dead. I am trying to work backwards to figure out if there's something I could have missed in trying to get the tank cleaned up and out of danger. I had recommended that they take the anemone back to the place they purchased it, but obviously they didn't have time to. They were told that the live rock crashed the tank by another store, but this rock is well cured and I've sold more than 300 pounds of it to people with established systems with no issues at all.
Anyone have any ideas? They're going to bring me some water to test, but I haven't seen it yet to fill in those details.
Barbie