Six months ago, I got a Biocube 16 (The old build thread). I probably had a lot of beginners luck, but things went well enough that I am now a committed reefer- even more so because my son, 10 months old when I started, seems to be enjoying it more and more every time he hits some developmental milestone (he already says 'hi fish' when he sees the tank, and his favorite inhabitant is the cleaner shrimp). So what else is there to do at this point but upgrade to my big boy tank? Behold, the Day 1 FTS:
We ended up with 40lbs of aquascape (I weighed it on my bathroom scale, haha), 40 lbs of sand, and exactly 40 gallons of water inside!
The aquascape was a fun project. We broke apart about 60 lbs of rock to reattach into this configuration. Yes, I know that one peak is too high and I'll never be able to put a coral there. Let's call it a design choice.
I brought over rocks from the other tank to help assist with getting the microbiome started, and transferred the baggy of ceramic bioballs from the old sump into the new one. Then I added Dr. Tim's ammonium chloride and a frozen shrimp for good measure (I like watching the gross slime blob grow around it).
Here's where I get in trouble with the tank police, maybe: two of the rocks are just rocks with muck on them, but the other two are my GSP and firework cloves/blue hypnea islands. They're super hardy and I wanted their bacteria! My green rhodactis plug unexpectedly attached to the firework cloves rock, so it came too (but I separated it in the new tank). Critters that joined the fun: an astraea snail that refused to detach, and my emerald crab that I forgot about entirely until I saw it scampering around in the bucket I transferred the rocks with. Fingers crossed for those two. Those rocks came with some spaghetti worms and spionid worms attached to them (regular harmless, not coral boring. I'm sure because I have no stony corals for them to bore into). I'm not too concerned about these, but hopefully they make it! I find hitchhikers to be super interesting.
I'm now waiting for diatoms before I transfer anything else over (except for a couple of my more boring zoa plugs). Once those get started, it's time to bring my conch and trochus snail!
Current tank status:
We ended up with 40lbs of aquascape (I weighed it on my bathroom scale, haha), 40 lbs of sand, and exactly 40 gallons of water inside!
The aquascape was a fun project. We broke apart about 60 lbs of rock to reattach into this configuration. Yes, I know that one peak is too high and I'll never be able to put a coral there. Let's call it a design choice.
I brought over rocks from the other tank to help assist with getting the microbiome started, and transferred the baggy of ceramic bioballs from the old sump into the new one. Then I added Dr. Tim's ammonium chloride and a frozen shrimp for good measure (I like watching the gross slime blob grow around it).
Here's where I get in trouble with the tank police, maybe: two of the rocks are just rocks with muck on them, but the other two are my GSP and firework cloves/blue hypnea islands. They're super hardy and I wanted their bacteria! My green rhodactis plug unexpectedly attached to the firework cloves rock, so it came too (but I separated it in the new tank). Critters that joined the fun: an astraea snail that refused to detach, and my emerald crab that I forgot about entirely until I saw it scampering around in the bucket I transferred the rocks with. Fingers crossed for those two. Those rocks came with some spaghetti worms and spionid worms attached to them (regular harmless, not coral boring. I'm sure because I have no stony corals for them to bore into). I'm not too concerned about these, but hopefully they make it! I find hitchhikers to be super interesting.
I'm now waiting for diatoms before I transfer anything else over (except for a couple of my more boring zoa plugs). Once those get started, it's time to bring my conch and trochus snail!
Current tank status: