Ya know, I'm starting to think an 'Artmeia' tank might be a good
introductory tank for people who think they might be interested
in saltwater. It would allow them to get all the plumbing up, get
them into the practice of water tests and changing, and have
something fun to look at while they save up for their real reef.
The only problem is that Artemia is not very "pumpable".
More like... "blendable". So, since most reefers seem to
use under-tank sumps, I would need a pump that can
pump with low shear forces to a head of approx 4-5 feet
at approx 100 Gph.
If I can find an inexpensive Artemia-safe pumping system, all
someone would need to "see if they have what it takes" to keep
a simple saltwater aquarium would be:
Plumbing:
* < 55 gallon tank
* A PVC siphon overflow (no tank drilling!)
* Some buckets with garden hose or PVC siphons as the
overflow intake, refugium, and sump.
* A plankton-safe pump (this is my dilemma)
* A garden-hose return
Substrate:
* Reef salt (whatever they can get - Artmeia isn't picky)
* Declorinator (Novium, Start-Right, air stone & bucket, whatever)
* 1/2" layer of calcium carbonate sand (ie argonite)
(in both the tank and refugium)
Lighting:
* Freshwater-class hood (dime-a-dozen)
* Flourescent "Grow Light" for the refugium
Bio Load: (subject to change, I'm testing...)
* Biozyme (or Live Sand) for initial bacteria
* One dead frozen shrimp
After that has cycled till the ammonia is gone...
* Chaeto in the refugium
After that has cycled until the nitrites are gone...
* A pinch or two of brine shrimp
Testing:
* Hydrometer
* Ammonia
* Nitrites
* pH
* Copper (to determine if they have to use DI/RO or Tap)
* Thermometer (and not one of those crappy stick-on-tank LCD ones!)
Total cost should be under $200, and something any high school
kid could do. The theory being is that you now have a 'play' setup
with an active, cheap, forgiving, and easily replaced bio-load that
simulates the chemistry of a reef setup.
And, once said newbie finds that they actually have the patience,
funds, and nerves of steel to "go reef", they have a cheap source of
Artemia!
(Oh, did I mention that I was also one of those 'said newbies'?
I figure that if I can't keep Artemia alive, I should really stay away
from the reef.)
introductory tank for people who think they might be interested
in saltwater. It would allow them to get all the plumbing up, get
them into the practice of water tests and changing, and have
something fun to look at while they save up for their real reef.
The only problem is that Artemia is not very "pumpable".
More like... "blendable". So, since most reefers seem to
use under-tank sumps, I would need a pump that can
pump with low shear forces to a head of approx 4-5 feet
at approx 100 Gph.
If I can find an inexpensive Artemia-safe pumping system, all
someone would need to "see if they have what it takes" to keep
a simple saltwater aquarium would be:
Plumbing:
* < 55 gallon tank
* A PVC siphon overflow (no tank drilling!)
* Some buckets with garden hose or PVC siphons as the
overflow intake, refugium, and sump.
* A plankton-safe pump (this is my dilemma)
* A garden-hose return
Substrate:
* Reef salt (whatever they can get - Artmeia isn't picky)
* Declorinator (Novium, Start-Right, air stone & bucket, whatever)
* 1/2" layer of calcium carbonate sand (ie argonite)
(in both the tank and refugium)
Lighting:
* Freshwater-class hood (dime-a-dozen)
* Flourescent "Grow Light" for the refugium
Bio Load: (subject to change, I'm testing...)
* Biozyme (or Live Sand) for initial bacteria
* One dead frozen shrimp
After that has cycled till the ammonia is gone...
* Chaeto in the refugium
After that has cycled until the nitrites are gone...
* A pinch or two of brine shrimp
Testing:
* Hydrometer
* Ammonia
* Nitrites
* pH
* Copper (to determine if they have to use DI/RO or Tap)
* Thermometer (and not one of those crappy stick-on-tank LCD ones!)
Total cost should be under $200, and something any high school
kid could do. The theory being is that you now have a 'play' setup
with an active, cheap, forgiving, and easily replaced bio-load that
simulates the chemistry of a reef setup.
And, once said newbie finds that they actually have the patience,
funds, and nerves of steel to "go reef", they have a cheap source of
Artemia!
(Oh, did I mention that I was also one of those 'said newbies'?
I figure that if I can't keep Artemia alive, I should really stay away
from the reef.)