Paul I thought it would be cool to let folks take a peek at your tank
412567paulb_tank1.jpg
Ha Ha, I love this thread and I published that particular picture many times as I am proud of the cycles my tank has gone through. That algae phase of the tank actually taught me something and I had algae blooms like that maybe 3 times.
My tank is and always has been an experiment, algae, cyano, diatoms, ich, tuberculosis, fungus, flatworms to me are a fantastic learning experience. If my tank never experienced these things I would be at the mercy of thousands of opinions on the internet how to deal with this stuff but I was fortunate to go through all of it with no help, only relying on my own intuition, experience and SCUBA diving years to over come it.
I can cure Pop eye in a few seconds and ich in a day but when I write about these seemingly un real remedies I get flamed so I don't.
That picture of the algae bloom was the healthiest my reef ever was. Fish were spawning and all the corals were growing well. Algae is not a disease, but a beneficial force in the ocean. If it were not for algae there would be no fish, no corals and no us. Adfter that picture was taken maybe 20 years ago I have learned how to have algae in my reef but only have it grow where I want it. A tank with no algae is not a healthy tank, far from it. Algae is a living thing and it grows inside our corals, it provides food and shelter for the bottom of the food chain and it grows on every reef in the sea. If it did not there would be no humugus heards of foot long tangs, no legions of urchins, no multitudes of slugs or lichens and no snails. But if you do any diving you will see that the majority of life on a reef are the animals I mentioned. Why are they there? Oh, I don't know, wait, Maybe it's the algae! Dive at night and see the reef covered in urchins, guess what they are eating?
Of course we don't want it growing on our corals, I don't either and I don't have any on my corals. My tank only has a short "healthy" growth on some rocks but the majority of it grows abundtly in my algae trough where I get the benefit of the algae without the hastle of having to have to clear it from the coral. Algae will not harm coral unless it blocks the light.
Instead of reactors, phosphate and nitrate removers, I rely on algae to do that for me for free. I have no reactors or any other means of artificially reducing algae or phosphate except what grows naturally in the tank. I also have no hospital or quarantine tank as I have not needed one for so long.
I also know I have no where the nicest looking tank on here, far from it. It is also probably not the healthiest or cleanest.
Most people would empty my tank and put in a DSB or goldfish. But it is a very old tank that has never crashed. I agree my methods seem wierd but as I said, this is an experiment and was never meant to be a thing of beauty to be admired for just beauty. I am an inventer and experimenter and that is the part of the hobby I love.
I am in awe and jealous of many of the gorgeous tanks you guys have, but for me I like my tank just the way it is
Have a great day and stay safe.
paul
This was not taken in my tank. I took this at a tide pool in the Long Island Sound. I put this tiny anemine in my reef along with this rock. This red turf algae is what sometimes grows on some rocks in my reef. It is natural and I introduced it from the sea. It has been in there for deacdes and only grows in some places. I like it as it is natural.
Sometimes it grows a lot like here. But usually it is only in a few places.
This is a recent picture, you can see a little short algae, thats about all there is on the rocks right now, but the algae trough is full of algae just like I designed it to be.