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Turbosek

Seattle Fish Store

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The family and I took a drive down to Seattle yesterday...she went shopping for the kids, and I took Serene, my 8 year old daughter, to Salt Water City. I ahd read some good reviews on the web. When I got there, I was impressed with their coral selection. They only do saltwater, which is noce as well.

One cool thing, was they have a section where you can buy from $10, $20, $30, $40, and $50 frags tanks. This is a good way for beginners to try differnet corals w/o breaking the bank.

They also had some of the most expensive corals I have ever seen. One was like 4" diameter and it was $1500!

Another interesting thisng about this store, was the complete lack of san or substrate. Yes, they preach bare bottom. when I asked him about this, he of course said there are always opossing opnnions. In his 15 years of business, he feels that unless you know how to take care of s DSB, you should not have one. He said there are too many other ways to lower nitrates. He agreed that you loose the ability to keep natural reef sand sifters and such, but he also feels more people are interested in seeing corals and fish...he has coral display tanks rather than reef tanks:-)

I also noticed he was using all 20,000K bulbs. He said "blue sells and we are here to sell product". He was also very helpful and spent 2 hours giving me advice. The best advice he gave me was to send my return line outside up the back and down into the tank, and use my 2nd hole in the overflow for a back up drain in case the main drain gets clogged. He said to just make a standard stand pipe that is just below the top of the tank, so it will drain if the water gets that high for some reason.

So, I am planing on using a DSB of 6". I will put 3" of dry sand down, throw in a shrimps until the amonia cycles, then add my base and live rock and another 3" of live sand, and lights on 6 hours/day, for the rest of the cycle, doing plenty of water changes to keep the nitrite levels low until they are gone. I know I will have a horrid algae bloom, but that is part of establishing a tank right? From my experieince, the algae will eventually go away and it will be crystal clear:-)

What are the top 3 things I should do with a DSB to make sure it stays healthy?

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Updated 05-06-2010 at 11:55 PM by melev

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  1. Turbosek's Avatar
    Sorry about all the typos....I am not stupid, just lazy:-).....Except when it comes to reefing!
  2. Hat39406's Avatar
    Hey Turbo, man I wish they had a store like that here! Sounds like you had a great time, and a very informative time at that. The algae will come but I believe it stay for different durations. My last tank, it stayed for what seemed like months. This tank, it was like two weeks; although I started with LFS ro and saltwater this time. It just all depends. I heard if you get an emerald crab they eat the algae. I had a white crab and It use to eat the algae fast.
  3. melev's Avatar
    I find it interesting that after you were told by the LFS not to go with sand, you concluded with your 6" DSB. Not what I expected you to type. hehe

    4" to 6" is what is recommended for a DSB. The general rule is to leave it alone and not disturb it. A bunch of critters to keep the top 1/2" moving is best, which keeps it aerated. Hermits, starfish, cucumbers, conchs, and nassarius snails. Those are your sand crew.

    During the cycle, don't do any water changes. That just slows down the process instead of letting it peak and fall as it should. You don't need any lights on during the cycling period - leave them off.
  4. HAWAII's Avatar
    Where is this at? do you have the address or web page? i live near seattle ...
  5. Turbosek's Avatar
    http://www.saltwatercity.com/

    They are actually in Bellevue. I would check them out. What area do you live in?
  6. Turbosek's Avatar
    Their website is horrible, but do not le that fool you. They have been in business for 15 years as a saltwater only fish store, and they are VERY helpfull and knowledgable...except for the bare bottom tank thing:-)