Absolutely no idea. Never kept a nem with anything other than MH.
Sorry. Maybe someone else can chime in here.
Sorry. Maybe someone else can chime in here.
FLESHY;4743860; said:Absolutely no idea. Never kept a nem with anything other than MH.
Sorry. Maybe someone else can chime in here.
FLESHY;4744042; said:Mh lighting doesnt have to be expensive...
I just lit a 125g with 300w of MH and 320w of VHO for probably under $400, including the build of the canopy.
FLESHY;4745339; said:I dont know if double ended or mogul (Screw in) is cheaper...but there might be a difference there. I have never used any mogul type bulbs on any of my tanks.
Wiggles92;4750162; said:We went and got about 30 lbs. or so of cured live rock today. I'm pretty sure that at least three out of four of the pieces are from Fiji; I believe that one of the pieces is cultured Atlantic rock (it had some really nice algal growth on it). There were some snails and small starfish attached to some of the rocks. I thought that there was only one more new anemone with the live rock, but I found another one when I accidentally put my finger on it and got stung, so there are at least two more new anemones.
The additional live rock was the good news from this shopping trip, but there is some bad news. The LFS was out of aragonite and Instant Ocean (they sold out right before Christmas), and my dad decided to also get a juvenile pair of false percula clownfish. I'm hoping that the clownfish do fine and help with keeping the anemones alive, but I guess we'll see.
I'm going to go looking for more Instant Ocean and aragonite tomorrow, so I hope that we can do a 100% water change, add the new live rock, replace the substrate tomorrow, and fill the aquarium up all the way tomorrow.
My dad also plans on getting the proper lighting ASAP, so everything should be good soon.
Would I be able to put the current sand through a strainer to separate out the three different types of sand in order to potentially reuse some of it in this aquarium?
Any recommendations on how to proceed?
nonstophoops;4750815; said:You should not do a 100% water change with livestock in the tank. This will cause a mini cycle(or major) because you are removing too much bacterially established water at once. IMO you should do a series of 25% water changes at most, no more than 25% at once. If you could do a series of these every 4 to 7 days to get the nitrates to a manageable level that would be good.
I would not use the sand over again, for what you need you will be better off just buying one bag of sand for the bottom of your tank that is clean. The old stuff is going to be very very dirty and without a very thorough cleaning will just be putting wastes back into your tank.
Here is what I think you should do to switch the sand and get the tank to where you want it:
You could then take almost all the water and put it into a holding container with your livestock while you remove all the old sand and put in the new. Once the new sand is in, you could add the new rock too(if you don't already have it in). Then you would replace all the water in the holding container and fill up the rest with new water, so in essence a water change. You would then put all your livestock back into the tank.
This is not ideal, but considering your situation I think it should work.
I may be missing something here, so I hope someone else chimes in and fills in anything I missed.