How about all of the above?
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That's insane that they would suggest adding NoPox to the mix! Do they want you to get dinos? I briefly glanced at the instructions and it makes one seem that it feeds the nitrifying bacteria.Red Sea Reef Mature Kit (not using the NoPox) and after that finished added Microbacter 7.
Anything else came in on the livestock.
To this day I've never fed anything directly to the coral - I feed the fish and they feed the coral.
That is really cool. I am guessing you have a location with really clean water?Yes and no. I’ve done full dry start up twice now so feel like I’ve walked that path enough. I’m actually going to start up a new system soon. This time I’ll be pre aquascaping with dry, then mariculturing the rock myself in local waters for six months. It will likely be a macro algae / softie setup.
When setting up tanks, I have always done about 50% live rock and the other 50% dry rock. Going all live rock is a waste of money unless you need to transfer fish and coral ASAP.I’m planning on setting up a new tank and in two minds on going for live rock or sticking with dry rock.
Live rock, plus live sand and premium live rock or just the plain old box-o-rocks and a bag of sand.
Cost is a factor, but many claim benefits going the live route, pretty much setting up an insta tank with zero ugly phase but doesn’t mean you can cram the tank full from day one.
Then again going the live rock route, will probably mean spending a good couple of weeks with a pair of tweezers and a flash light hunting for unwelcome hitchhikers followed by “what’s this in my tank threads”..
As for aqua scaping, pile-o-rocks, nsa or hnsa, you not really gonna see any of it when the corals start growing and filling up.
I agree. Other than wanting to start a reef with just dry rocks to observe its progression, I would never start one without any live rock. Even having a just a piece of live rock among pounds of dry rock would be beneficial long term.As a life-long hobbyist and someone who was in the aquatic industry for many years, I have not-nor would I-ever start a system without "real" live rock.
Did you seed with live rock at any point? CuC? did you see with pods? and what type of algae?@Gtinnel Where did you get bacteria from? bottle or just add corals slowly? I Started with a Sterile tank I used life rock and still struggle with algea 3 years later. Nutrients have been stable for 2 years. Tried various brightwell products with little success Was thinking I need to start again and seed with some live rock.
That's awesome. Success stories like this makes me want to setup a dry rock tank just to observe it. Did you seed the tank with bacteria initially?I started a little over a year ago with dry rock in part because I had hopes of doing this cheaply , a concept that crashed into the steep learning curve running these tanks…
Though at the time the decision was partly made not knowing availability of things like TBS, partly due to hassle of getting live rock, and partly due to easier aquascaping.
TBH - not sure I’d do it much differently in a do-over. I’ve had a couple rounds of algae - one solved by adding more snails, one went away when the amphipod population grew enough to eat it faster than it could grow, and the other due to accidentally running almost no nutrients, solved by feeding more. I’m not sure ocean live rock would have saved any of those.
Some weird biodiversity would be nice, but a lot has come in on snails, crabs and frags, including pods, worms, Bristleworms, bonus snails, tunicates, sponges, feather dusters and more.
Yah I try to do this also when I have the space. I also want to grab some live rock from other places to keep diversifying the bacteria in the tank.The rock in my reef started as dry rock but it has been moved from tank to tank over the past 10 years. I remember it being difficult at first but after it has spent years in water I always try to use it when I set up a new tank. I also put a bunch of dry rock in my sump of my main tank after I have the setup of the new tank to at least try to seed the rock a bit.
Doesn't the tank need to be seeded with bacteria somehow though (before adding the coral)?I have never used bottled bacteria to start a tank. I always just take it incredibly slowly before adding any corals.
That's really cool. I love hitchhikers lol.Love TBS...same here...once added, huge difference in tank and Rock seeding.
I was fortunate to get a rare cup coral on one of my Live Rocks from TBS.
It's one of my favorites, because, nobody has them for sale...like anywhere...and it's grown and been amazing.
Rock and rubble from a seeded tank is the way to go long term and economically.Hard to justify the shipping for a 20 gallon tank worth of love rock. If this was my old 150 heck yes. My best hope now it to slowly gather rubble from seeded tanks or eventually drive out to tbs and beg to buy the sludge off the bottom of their tanks
Reef looks great! And to have a story alongside your reef must be nice.I chose dry rock because when I SCUBA dove in 1971 to collect rock in Hawaii they wouldn't allow me to carry all that stinking rock on the plane so I had to bleach it in my hotel room.
I am not quite as stupid now and would never start a tank with dry rock. Over the years I added local New York rock just for the bio diversity and bacteria.
That tank is still running with no problems.