Sherman
Has Met Willis
My local club was generous enough to all chip in and give me a great gift! I'm pretty excited about having a 12g nano sitting next to my desk. I've already started planning what I want to do with this tank, and this aquarium is going to be a lot of fun, along with some challenges... but that won't happen for a few months. I'll be headed out of the country in October, so I don't want to do anything drastic to this system until I get back. Luckily, that forces my hand at being patient, and I think it will be a good thing, in the end.
So, just as a matter of documentation, and to show you all it has water and has begun curing, here's the first full tank shot. The rocks are simply placed in there. This is not aquascaped, by any means. Right now, I'm still fighting the Southdown sand storms. This is the first time the sand has settled enough for a photo.
I seeded the sand with some sand from my established 38g. I also purchased a 3lb rock to bring in more diversity. The rest of the rock came from the stash of dead rock I've had stored since I set up the 38g, about 3 years ago. Already, the sand is crawling with spaghetti worms, and asterina stars somehow found their way over, as well.
The file cabinet that supports the nano is only made of your standard build-it-from-a-box particle board. While it's supported my weight before (And I weigh plenty more than the 12g nano), I didn't feel confident about the long term reliability, so I decided to add in a piece of 3/4" oak plywood I had left over from when I made my reactor cabinet. I cut it to the same bowfront shape as the nano, stained in black, and it's worked out really well.
I haven't been able to test the performance of the Sapphire nano skimmer, yet. It would seem that's not really going to be an option until my surface skimmer weir arrives. Without the weir, the water level in the rear chamber is so high, the skimmer is completely under water. It doesn't make very good bubbles that way .
To follow convention, I'll be using this thread as a sort of live journal, with updates as things happen. Thanks for looking!
So, just as a matter of documentation, and to show you all it has water and has begun curing, here's the first full tank shot. The rocks are simply placed in there. This is not aquascaped, by any means. Right now, I'm still fighting the Southdown sand storms. This is the first time the sand has settled enough for a photo.
I seeded the sand with some sand from my established 38g. I also purchased a 3lb rock to bring in more diversity. The rest of the rock came from the stash of dead rock I've had stored since I set up the 38g, about 3 years ago. Already, the sand is crawling with spaghetti worms, and asterina stars somehow found their way over, as well.
The file cabinet that supports the nano is only made of your standard build-it-from-a-box particle board. While it's supported my weight before (And I weigh plenty more than the 12g nano), I didn't feel confident about the long term reliability, so I decided to add in a piece of 3/4" oak plywood I had left over from when I made my reactor cabinet. I cut it to the same bowfront shape as the nano, stained in black, and it's worked out really well.
I haven't been able to test the performance of the Sapphire nano skimmer, yet. It would seem that's not really going to be an option until my surface skimmer weir arrives. Without the weir, the water level in the rear chamber is so high, the skimmer is completely under water. It doesn't make very good bubbles that way .
To follow convention, I'll be using this thread as a sort of live journal, with updates as things happen. Thanks for looking!