Time to start over!
by
, 01-19-2013 at 09:05 PM (9994 Views)
So my tank has been going pretty well. Almost too well. My Montipora has been putting on a measured growth weekly, gorgonians open and growing, even my goniopora has grown and attached to nearby rocks.
But I've always been unhappy with the tank.
Last week listening to Gary & Christine's Reef Threads podcast (which is a nice replacement to the Reef Addicts podcast since it is updated like.....NEVER! I'm looking at you Melev!) they made mention that eventually, all reef tanks look pretty much the same. I thought about it a little and realized, my tank (which I always thought would be a special little snowflake) was well on it's way to being the same thing everyone else had. Which is not to say everyone doesn't have a special little piece of the ocean, just that I wanted a different piece than them.
So I've been working on selling all of my livestock, with the exception of my Bangaii Cardinals, part of my ongoing project to produce at least 150 cardinals a year! (A little more info on this in a blog in the near future!)
SO!
In it's place I'm trying something I can't ever recalling seeing any do. The plan in my head is to have a 65 gallon tank. Halfway down the back, I'm going to drill the drain and return holes. So the tank will be filled half full of water (or half empty if you're a pessimist). This way, when you view it, you get a top down view as well as the front, and I can CRANK my MP10's into a wave that would otherwise spill over the sides. The other thing I want to do is create a surge device and have my drain hole be smaller than it should be. Hopefully (the idea as working in my head) the surge would quickly dump about 10-17 gallons of water in the tank and then slowly drain out with my too little drain.
I think I want to replace my T-5's with a single AI Sol module so the lighting is a little more dynamic. So far my livestock plan is simply a pair of clownfish I raised, anemone, and random little things I like but never seem to do as well as I would like with (pom pom crabs, little gobies). No sand, just rubble rock on the bottom.
So, I'm already starting the getting rid of livestock, with most of the animals being given to friends, some being sold. My biggest problem is getting rid of my breeding pair of Yellow-tail Blue Damsels. They get a bad rap, and no one wants them, but I truly love these two fish and want them to go to a home where they can be well looked after for many years to come. I'm looking at you, Melev.
Any thoughts or suggestions on my next adventure would be appreciated!