Roger that, I’m always eager for everyone’s input on cold marine aquaria. Would love to hear about your maintenance routine. I’d imagine it’s very simple with the water in your back yard (this is the excuse I used to get started myself).
I’m currently in process for finding a nitrate export method beyond water changes. Are you tracking water parameters, and if so do you have any methods or targets for stability?
I've never been big on water testing. I have done it a few times since starting just to get a sense for whether I have a bacterial community yet and it looks like I do. Ammonia was kind of high - running between 0.5 and 1ppm, but I feed heavily with phyto on a doser and it never increased beyond that range. I put in holdfasts partly covered in dead things and it never increased. Everything has looked happy and healthy except for gooseneck barnacles and sand dollars. I won't try those again until the tank is well established. I suspect that they might be finicky about clean water. This aquarium has a massive six inch deep sand bed of actual beach sand and a big pile of rocks taken from the beach, so I suspect that I have the bacterial community that it needs, even if it is not perfectly balanced yet. I figure that the macroalgae and the eelgrass will soak up a lot of ammonia and phosphates too.
I have skipped over the past 25 years of developments in the hobby and back in the day I didn't have a lot of money to spend on test kits, so I mostly just observed the tank and did water changes if things looked like they were going the wrong way. That is what I am doing for now while I catch up on aquarium science. Every other week, I go get about 15 gallons of water at the beach and do a water change. Whether it needs it or not, I am adding more plankton to the tank and I figure all my suspension feeders probably benefit from having more than just bottled phyto for their diet.
The tank has been going through an ugly phase with hair algae for the past month, but that seems to be reducing now. I have done very little other than scrape the glass and blow it off the rocks with a turkey baster. It has choked back my eelgrass, but I have a feeling that it will recover since it grows from rhizomes below the sand. If not, I will just get more when the next storm sends some.