Hey everyone, this is a long post but be patient with me.. I'm going to try to lay this story out as quickly and organized as possible.
I was previously in the hobby - I had a nano for about 3 years - and I just got so tired of the maintenance and testing.. mixing salt, blah blah blah - it got real old real quick.
Ive always wanted a tank back - so when I came back to the hobby I set out to be as low maintenance of a tank as possible. I knew to accomplish this, I'd need to be a stickler on maintenance - and I also knew that I'd be buying both my RODI & Saltwater premixed from the LFS. I looked into the Trident NP - and actually bought one - but never hooked it up because after reading reviews, it seems its very unreliable and may be more hassle than it's worth.
With the exceptions of 3 fish deaths, everything has gone flawlessly. The tank is thriving utilizing this low maintenance approach.
As of Today - Tank has been running for 5 months with no serious algae blooms, issues - the corals are all alive well and thriving. The fish that are currently in the tank are alive and well and thriving.
Tank Setup:
RedSea Max Nano 26 gallon Penisula.
Redsea ATO
Chiller
100W heater
Neptune w/ Temp, ORP, & PH Probes
CO2 Scrubber
Powerhead
Tank Location: My Office. This means the tank is typically alone on saturday and sunday (I may go in occasionally) and occasionally a day or two here or there - I try to never leave it alone for more than two days.
Here were my goals:
1. Start immediately, no cycling the tank.
2. No testing.
3. No Dosing.
4. Choose a simple stock list that can survive off of water changes alone.
Current filtration methods:
1. filter floss (changed after every single feeding to reduce nutrients)
2. Carbon (changed monthly)
3. Large HOB Skimmer (does not pull much, but will if necessary - I'm intentionally keeping excess nutrients low)
4. Seeded ceramic media in back chamber
Fish Stock List (in order of stocking order):
1. Clown
2. Clown
3. Flameback Angel (Deceased - 1st death)
4. Clean up crew (snails, hermits, etc - most are alive, hermits have taken out a couple snails)
5. Royal Gramma
6. Diamond back goby (Deceased - 3rd death)
7. Firefish (Deceased - 2nd death)
Coral Stock List:
1.GSP
2. Multiple Mushrooms
3. 3-4 different leathers
4. Some Zoas
5. Colt Coral
Maintenance:
1. 5 Gallon water change (reef crystals) every two weeks without failure (and after each death) - roughly 25% of overall volume of system
2. Change Filter floss after every feeding.
3. Change carbon every month
4. Clean skimmer container every two weeks during water change
5. Add copepods every 6 weeks or so
Feeding schedule:
1. I feed on MWF - alternating flake or pellet. I let them eat as much as they can until the fish stop - and then I turn on the pumps, wash the excess food out, and replace the filter floss. (I am not starving my fish - the clown fish and gramma in the tank have about doubled in size. Reef Builders has a whole video segment stating this is enough and theyve had many tanks thrive in these conditions. Over feeding is just as big of a problem as underfeeding.. so I'm trying to walk the fine line)
Time line of events:
1. Day one - Fritz turbo start (way more than bottle recommendation - let ceramic media sit in it for 6+ hours, let it sit in water of tank and circulate for 6+ hours). Live rock, live sand. Add a clown fish.
2. After about two weeks of the first clown fish thriving, added second clown fish.
3. After about two weeks of both clown fish thriving, added flameback angel (this may have been a mistake, it may have been a little small for the tank.)
4. After about two weeks of all fish doing well, there was some algae on the sandbed - not bad, just a green dusting - added a diamond goby to sift the sand. This is where the problems started.
Death 1: When goby went into tank - it was on a friday. Goby was being picked on by the flameback - but, the goby dug himself a hole under the rock - and was hiding just fine.. I figured he'd do that for a couple days anyway since he was new to the tank. I came in on Monday... to my surprise, the flameback was dead against the powerhead... not the goby. I chalked it up to the flameback probably had it coming and moved on. Did a 5 gallon water change.
5. After a couple weeks of stability, I added royal gramma to tank to replace flameback.
6. After a couple more weeks of stability, I added the firefish - This was to be my complete stock list.
Death 2: Tank was fine for about a month. Until the week of Thanksgiving. Came into the office on Wednesday - fed the fish, all fish were alive and happy and eating - all getting along.. all corals happy.. no signs of disease. Came back on friday - firefish was dead against powerhead.. Weird, 5 gallon water change.
7. Came back to office on Monday & Tuesday - all fish happy, corals happy - no signs of disease, no issues - all fish ate. Everything is happy.
Death 3: Came in wednesday morning, Goby was dead against the powerhead.. did a 5 gallon water change... Today is saturday - everything is happy and healthy again.
So ---- whats my problem here? Again: I have had no algae blooms to note... no corals have ever been upset.. no fish have ever gasped for air or showed signs or symptoms of disease. (please dont tell me to test... the whole point of this is to try to avoid testing):
- Do I have a bully? The Royal Gramma does kind of hold a large cave as his own - but I've never heard of a royal gramma being aggressive and I've never seen the Royal Gramma display any sort of aggression ... I do know that clown fish can be aggressive - as my last tank had the meanest SOB in the world - but these clownfish have showed no signs of aggression that I've seen
- Did I overstock the tank perhaps causing aggression?
- What is my silent killer? I would imagine if the tank water perimeters were way off, the corals would suffer, or the tank would spike an algae bloom of some sort - and the fish that have remained in the tank that continue to be happy and healthy - wouldve died too. or atleast showed symptoms of suffering.
- Is my LACK of nutrients killing the fish? Should I pull back on filter floss changes?
I PROMISE that if this continues to be a failure in the next couple months, I will resort back to traditional testing - or shut the tank down and re-home the fish. It is not my goal to continue to keep killing livestock - I feel bad when it happens - I'm just trying not to over complicate this hobby - and trying to spot issues with the tank before it happens by utilizing the symptoms of the tank and what I can see with my eyes rather than be a slave to testing.
I was previously in the hobby - I had a nano for about 3 years - and I just got so tired of the maintenance and testing.. mixing salt, blah blah blah - it got real old real quick.
Ive always wanted a tank back - so when I came back to the hobby I set out to be as low maintenance of a tank as possible. I knew to accomplish this, I'd need to be a stickler on maintenance - and I also knew that I'd be buying both my RODI & Saltwater premixed from the LFS. I looked into the Trident NP - and actually bought one - but never hooked it up because after reading reviews, it seems its very unreliable and may be more hassle than it's worth.
With the exceptions of 3 fish deaths, everything has gone flawlessly. The tank is thriving utilizing this low maintenance approach.
As of Today - Tank has been running for 5 months with no serious algae blooms, issues - the corals are all alive well and thriving. The fish that are currently in the tank are alive and well and thriving.
Tank Setup:
RedSea Max Nano 26 gallon Penisula.
Redsea ATO
Chiller
100W heater
Neptune w/ Temp, ORP, & PH Probes
CO2 Scrubber
Powerhead
Tank Location: My Office. This means the tank is typically alone on saturday and sunday (I may go in occasionally) and occasionally a day or two here or there - I try to never leave it alone for more than two days.
Here were my goals:
1. Start immediately, no cycling the tank.
2. No testing.
3. No Dosing.
4. Choose a simple stock list that can survive off of water changes alone.
Current filtration methods:
1. filter floss (changed after every single feeding to reduce nutrients)
2. Carbon (changed monthly)
3. Large HOB Skimmer (does not pull much, but will if necessary - I'm intentionally keeping excess nutrients low)
4. Seeded ceramic media in back chamber
Fish Stock List (in order of stocking order):
1. Clown
2. Clown
3. Flameback Angel (Deceased - 1st death)
4. Clean up crew (snails, hermits, etc - most are alive, hermits have taken out a couple snails)
5. Royal Gramma
6. Diamond back goby (Deceased - 3rd death)
7. Firefish (Deceased - 2nd death)
Coral Stock List:
1.GSP
2. Multiple Mushrooms
3. 3-4 different leathers
4. Some Zoas
5. Colt Coral
Maintenance:
1. 5 Gallon water change (reef crystals) every two weeks without failure (and after each death) - roughly 25% of overall volume of system
2. Change Filter floss after every feeding.
3. Change carbon every month
4. Clean skimmer container every two weeks during water change
5. Add copepods every 6 weeks or so
Feeding schedule:
1. I feed on MWF - alternating flake or pellet. I let them eat as much as they can until the fish stop - and then I turn on the pumps, wash the excess food out, and replace the filter floss. (I am not starving my fish - the clown fish and gramma in the tank have about doubled in size. Reef Builders has a whole video segment stating this is enough and theyve had many tanks thrive in these conditions. Over feeding is just as big of a problem as underfeeding.. so I'm trying to walk the fine line)
Time line of events:
1. Day one - Fritz turbo start (way more than bottle recommendation - let ceramic media sit in it for 6+ hours, let it sit in water of tank and circulate for 6+ hours). Live rock, live sand. Add a clown fish.
2. After about two weeks of the first clown fish thriving, added second clown fish.
3. After about two weeks of both clown fish thriving, added flameback angel (this may have been a mistake, it may have been a little small for the tank.)
4. After about two weeks of all fish doing well, there was some algae on the sandbed - not bad, just a green dusting - added a diamond goby to sift the sand. This is where the problems started.
Death 1: When goby went into tank - it was on a friday. Goby was being picked on by the flameback - but, the goby dug himself a hole under the rock - and was hiding just fine.. I figured he'd do that for a couple days anyway since he was new to the tank. I came in on Monday... to my surprise, the flameback was dead against the powerhead... not the goby. I chalked it up to the flameback probably had it coming and moved on. Did a 5 gallon water change.
5. After a couple weeks of stability, I added royal gramma to tank to replace flameback.
6. After a couple more weeks of stability, I added the firefish - This was to be my complete stock list.
Death 2: Tank was fine for about a month. Until the week of Thanksgiving. Came into the office on Wednesday - fed the fish, all fish were alive and happy and eating - all getting along.. all corals happy.. no signs of disease. Came back on friday - firefish was dead against powerhead.. Weird, 5 gallon water change.
7. Came back to office on Monday & Tuesday - all fish happy, corals happy - no signs of disease, no issues - all fish ate. Everything is happy.
Death 3: Came in wednesday morning, Goby was dead against the powerhead.. did a 5 gallon water change... Today is saturday - everything is happy and healthy again.
So ---- whats my problem here? Again: I have had no algae blooms to note... no corals have ever been upset.. no fish have ever gasped for air or showed signs or symptoms of disease. (please dont tell me to test... the whole point of this is to try to avoid testing):
- Do I have a bully? The Royal Gramma does kind of hold a large cave as his own - but I've never heard of a royal gramma being aggressive and I've never seen the Royal Gramma display any sort of aggression ... I do know that clown fish can be aggressive - as my last tank had the meanest SOB in the world - but these clownfish have showed no signs of aggression that I've seen
- Did I overstock the tank perhaps causing aggression?
- What is my silent killer? I would imagine if the tank water perimeters were way off, the corals would suffer, or the tank would spike an algae bloom of some sort - and the fish that have remained in the tank that continue to be happy and healthy - wouldve died too. or atleast showed symptoms of suffering.
- Is my LACK of nutrients killing the fish? Should I pull back on filter floss changes?
I PROMISE that if this continues to be a failure in the next couple months, I will resort back to traditional testing - or shut the tank down and re-home the fish. It is not my goal to continue to keep killing livestock - I feel bad when it happens - I'm just trying not to over complicate this hobby - and trying to spot issues with the tank before it happens by utilizing the symptoms of the tank and what I can see with my eyes rather than be a slave to testing.
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