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I found a rod that fits in between and pushed out some junk.
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Sounds good I’ll just let it sit for 30 minutes and suck a little bit off the bottom.is it little trapped animals within that space/how amazing is that location/who would have thought? no that wont harm in that much dilution. The major rinse only needs to be the sand this is still on track. I would have never, ever thought of that. some minor clouding from that area can be filtered out using carbon, I hate for you to make that much water / that will be ok
The reason for 100% was Dino-X and other contaminants that has happened in the last five years. I’m sure things will be fine but I was hoping for a crystal clear rip clean and I can already see stuff floating and just a slight haze. I’m not stopping now almost full temp and salinity are good.I do big rips all the time on tanks. One thing I don’t do is replace all the water, although I can’t think of why a compelling reason not to.
I typically will remove about 80% of the water before doing anything, and then just take everything out and get all the junk out by stirring the sand up and either removing it, or pushing it all over into the corner. Then, remove the remaining 20% of water, lay the sand back out, rebuild, and then add the water back. Corals never seem to care.
Don’t look too close at the rocks or you will see Aiptasia acting like popcorn. I’m mixing up some fish food right now and I’ll feed the corals with the drain water and phytoplankton. Is there anything else you would feed the fallow tank?With that level of coralline coverage in the system Jon you have inherent ongoing algae prevention in place, I’m also seeing up close detail on the rocks and it’s not plant whiskers it’s darn near all hard coralline which is bio rejecting to algae and chemically beckoning to corals and reef larvae.
Removing detritus from up under that system buys years of coral growth and clears the receiving spaces for all the feed we dump in our tanks (gets eaten then expelled as detritus/mulm/cloud)
Your system is hungry for feed and nutrient... you’ve cleaned the gut it’s ready for cyclic refill :) after the storm.
Lysmata shrimp might be the weakest creatures in all of reefing he looks happy there’s no better mine canary. Any free ammonia, the lysmata goes first.