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You're not wrong at all, but bleach curing is A LOT faster and easier than what you're describing, which is why I'd suggest the OP simply bleaches their rock to start over (or, starts over with some quality live rock).@Dyln think a little bit of information can be worse than none, people assume they know what they are talking about. I wouldn’t bleach the rock and I wouldn’t throw it away. Clean everything thoroughly with new saltwater or RODI, sure. Then let it hangout in new saltwater with heat and water motion for a while. Throw in some established live rock to seed beneficial organisms. Keep track of nitrate and ammonia, let the tank cycle.
If you want to wait I would hit up @Eric R. And get some guidance. Sounds like he has done this beforeHi @BristleWormHater @Eric R. @exnisstech @Idech @Fish Fan @reneeL @SueAubu @Cichlid Dad
Thank you all for sharing your thoughts, knowledge, and experiences! I’ve found this really interesting.
Would you still suggest sterilising if waiting longer isn't a problem?
One thing this hobby has definitely taught me is patience, so I’m not in any rush to get this tank going. Personally, I’d rather avoid sterilising the tank if possible. Also, as long as it’s safe for me and any future tank inhabitants, I’m curious to see how the tank will respond if I clean equipment/surfaces/rocks, add fresh water, restore water circulation, and do water changes.
To be on the safe side, I’ll take water samples to my local fish store (LFS) for compare results. If things still don’t balance out, then sterilising might be the next step.
Or is it a safety risk to me or future inhabitants not to sterilise the tank?
Still seems a little iffy to me, I really wouldn't want anything to be sticking around. I could see it going both ways though.Hi @BristleWormHater @Eric R. @exnisstech @Idech @Fish Fan @reneeL @SueAubu @Cichlid Dad
Thank you all for sharing your thoughts, knowledge, and experiences! I’ve found this really interesting.
Would you still suggest sterilising if waiting longer isn't a problem?
One thing this hobby has definitely taught me is patience, so I’m not in any rush to get this tank going. Personally, I’d rather avoid sterilising the tank if possible. Also, as long as it’s safe for me and any future tank inhabitants, I’m curious to see how the tank will respond if I clean equipment/surfaces/rocks, add fresh water, restore water circulation, and do water changes.
To be on the safe side, I’ll take water samples to my local fish store (LFS) for compare results. If things still don’t balance out, then sterilising might be the next step.
Or is it a safety risk to me or future inhabitants not to sterilise the tank?
Friend, you're all good here! It was an amoeba, and I, for one, fully thought your overall point was quite valid. Stop beating yourself up! no worries!I'd also like to apologize for not fact checking myself before I posted last night, stupid mistake.
Thanks to what you shared, I learned something new and relevant, and I believe others did too. It’s wonderful that we’re all here to support and learn from one another!Still seems a little iffy to me, I really wouldn't want anything to be sticking around. I could see it going both ways though.
Like @Cichlid Dad was saying, @Eric R. is probably your guy if you don't want to go with the scorched earth approach.
If you do decide to sterilize I would probably add some ocean rubble rock to give you a good biodiversity boost. There are a lot of guides for bleach curing, @Fish Fan linked one earlier.
I'd also like to apologize for not fact checking myself before I posted last night, stupid mistake.
Thank you. Can you elaborate on the potential dangers? Are these risks specific to future inhabitants, humans in general, or both?I would take the approach of radically cleaning it and start from scratch like a new tank.
To many dangers lurking in old water.
The tank is relatively new. Should not worry about silicon.
Empty tank, clean with citric acid solution. Powder is cheap on Amazon by the pound. Mixes real easy.
Soak equipment over night in a tub with citric acid water. Clean thoroughly.
Rocks. I soaked them high concentrated pure Clorox solution for a week.
Sand. Either bite the bullet and buy new sand or also treat it like the rocks.
Give both a good rinse and air dry. Chlorine evaporates easy and there is no residue left.
Yes, all does material then but you could easily add bacteria to get started faster.