And another thing...
Originally posted by wastememphis
thanks for any help you can give, keep in mind that Im new and its ok to tell me i dont know what I'm talking about I'm just trying to learn about the tanks before I jump into anything.
You mentioned video games and going to a new level. Well, that is exactly what you need right now. Keeping a saltwater tank is very easy, but keeping a reef tank is not. Reef tanks are delicate recreations of an ecosystem that require pristine, stable and perfect conditions. Any deviation from that and they can crash VERY quickly. You need to be able to find the yellow key and collect 100 gold stars before you attempt a reef because most corals you find in a store were not captive born. They were ripped brutally from their perfect conditions on the reef, put in a plastic bag and shipped far too long in their own waste to a store near you. You, the end user, owe them the respect of being FULLY prepared to take care of them. Corals are not plants. They are living creatures that, once gone, will not be there for us. Demand from users that get a coral, let it die, get a new coral, let that one die, get a new coral, let that one die, etc... are a tremendous drain on the reefs. I'm not saying that you will go that route, you had the brains to come find a place like this and ask first, but that is how it goes a lot of times. I usta spend a lot of time at my LFS, was in sometimes 5 times a week, and this one guy usta come in all the time. Everytime I saw him for like a month, he was getting a new coral. I finally spoke to him and I said "man, you must have a beautiful reef tank by now, got any pictures of it?" Know what he said? "No, they all keep dying. I'm eventually going to find one that can survive my tank!" Needless to say, I was less than pleased to find this sort of ignorance that close to home. I told him where to find the info he needed and last time I saw him, probably a year ago, he was in the process of building a Halide hood for his tank. He hadn't killed another coral since he started doing some research on em.
Ok, so what's my point? You say you are a beginner, and that is obvious to us. Now, take the advice you've been given here and grow from it. Don't be a rebel and think you can make it work all by yourself, cuz man, you can't. You need the info that people here can give you if you want to get it right. A lot of us have been there an done that, and we know what we are talking about. Do yourself a favor and act like one of my favorite inverts.. Be a sponge, soak up all the info you can and approach your reef with respect. Make responsible decisions about the lives you are risking. You'll be far better off in the long run for it.
Oh and forget the shark idea. Every newbie starts off with the idea "oooooh, I wanna get a shark!" or "oooooh, I wanna get an octopus!" and it never works out. You kill a shark and then another one has to be caught to take its place in the LFS tank. Sharks and Octopi can be kept, but it takes a truly advanced keeper to make them thrive. Yer not there yet, in fact hardly anyone on this board is there yet. Oriongirl (Onion) has kept Octopi before and she can attest to the difficulty involved. Baby steps my friend, baby steps.
"Nothing good ever happens fast in a reef tank" remember that, or you'll hear it again when you post "Why are all my corals closed and brown?".. I'll be there reminding you of this post
