Well we did it. Today I went shopping, armed with knowledge and notes from here, and came home with a new toy. Needless to say we ended up spending twice what we though we would, but we did upgrade some things and bought more rock than we originally thought we would to start.
Here is what followed us home. (Don't you have to keep it if it follows you home?)
1 - 30gal long tank. Great size with 36" of horizontal swimming room.
1 - basic oak stand (really needs something done to it to dress it up)
1 - 36" Coralife Lunar Aqualight 192W (10,000k/actinic/blue LED)
1 - Stealth Submersible Heater (100W)
1 - Penguin powerhead 1550 (300gph) Wanted a Koralia but nobody has one
1 - ESU Digital Thermometer
1 - CaribSea Arag-Alive (20lb live sand)
1 - CaribSea Aragamax Sand (30 lb)
20lb of base rock (Beautiful stuff that I hope is even better when it starts to live)
31lb of Fiji Live Rock (Lots of purple and color)
You will notice that there is no salt mix on the above list. We found a store that will sell premix water for $.75 a gallon. That is cheaper than I can make it without having my own RO filter. Their base rock and fiji rock was a lot cheaper than anywhere else as well.
When we got home we set up the stand and tank and started the process of aquascaping. First I put the base rock in (on a very thin layer of sand) and surrounded it with the dead sand. Now comes the water. Gee, you just haven't lived till you try to fill a tank with a 6gal container of water. I ended up pouring water from the large container into a pitcher and slowly pouring that into a bowl I sat in the sand. After I had added the first 6 gallons of water, I cut open the bag of live sand and spread it around over the base sand. It has lots of bits of shell and stuff in it and at first it surprised me, but the overall effect looks good.
TIme for more water. After adding another 6 gallons of water, I started placing my live rock. Hard to do since I now had a aquatic dust storm going on in the tank. I did the best I could by feeling around and made sure the rocks were stable. I even bumped the cabinet a couple times to make sure they didn't move. SOLID!
FInally I added the last of the water and put the heater and powerhead in the tank.
Next came the lights. What a fun fixture I ended up with. I was also surprised after plugging it in how bright it was. So much for watching movies in the dark. LOL I love the lunar lights.
For now I have a cloudy tank with some beautiful rock and some impressive lights. The water has already started clearing. Now I just have to sit and be patient. I'm sure I'll play with the aquascaping some and try to find the best place for the powerhead.
Here are a couple pics of what I have so far. Sorry for the long post, but I'm really excited about this. I can't think of a better 40th birthday present right now. (few weeks early for a gift, but I just couldn't wait)
Here is what followed us home. (Don't you have to keep it if it follows you home?)
1 - 30gal long tank. Great size with 36" of horizontal swimming room.
1 - basic oak stand (really needs something done to it to dress it up)
1 - 36" Coralife Lunar Aqualight 192W (10,000k/actinic/blue LED)
1 - Stealth Submersible Heater (100W)
1 - Penguin powerhead 1550 (300gph) Wanted a Koralia but nobody has one
1 - ESU Digital Thermometer
1 - CaribSea Arag-Alive (20lb live sand)
1 - CaribSea Aragamax Sand (30 lb)
20lb of base rock (Beautiful stuff that I hope is even better when it starts to live)
31lb of Fiji Live Rock (Lots of purple and color)
You will notice that there is no salt mix on the above list. We found a store that will sell premix water for $.75 a gallon. That is cheaper than I can make it without having my own RO filter. Their base rock and fiji rock was a lot cheaper than anywhere else as well.
When we got home we set up the stand and tank and started the process of aquascaping. First I put the base rock in (on a very thin layer of sand) and surrounded it with the dead sand. Now comes the water. Gee, you just haven't lived till you try to fill a tank with a 6gal container of water. I ended up pouring water from the large container into a pitcher and slowly pouring that into a bowl I sat in the sand. After I had added the first 6 gallons of water, I cut open the bag of live sand and spread it around over the base sand. It has lots of bits of shell and stuff in it and at first it surprised me, but the overall effect looks good.
TIme for more water. After adding another 6 gallons of water, I started placing my live rock. Hard to do since I now had a aquatic dust storm going on in the tank. I did the best I could by feeling around and made sure the rocks were stable. I even bumped the cabinet a couple times to make sure they didn't move. SOLID!
FInally I added the last of the water and put the heater and powerhead in the tank.
Next came the lights. What a fun fixture I ended up with. I was also surprised after plugging it in how bright it was. So much for watching movies in the dark. LOL I love the lunar lights.
For now I have a cloudy tank with some beautiful rock and some impressive lights. The water has already started clearing. Now I just have to sit and be patient. I'm sure I'll play with the aquascaping some and try to find the best place for the powerhead.
Here are a couple pics of what I have so far. Sorry for the long post, but I'm really excited about this. I can't think of a better 40th birthday present right now. (few weeks early for a gift, but I just couldn't wait)

