Yesterday afternoon I removed 25-lbs of Buna Spiney live rock to lower the skyline in my reef. I had to remove about 15 pieces of rock from the top and both sides of the rockwork first and then I attempted to see how many of those I could get back into the tank without it looking overcrowded. I decided that leaving out the five largest pieces of Buna Spiney provided the most satisfactory result.
I rearranged the structure so that no pieces of rock are any closer than 3" to the front glass and most are much farther back than that. There is not much I can do about the right side of the tank without removing virtually all of the rock and starting over, which I wasn't willing to do. So the cast acrylic upright support there is still leaning against the right side of the tank. I thought I had fixed the left side of the tank so that the closest pieces of Buna Spiney were at least 3" away from the side glass but it looks like one small piece attached to the cast acrylic rod has slipped out of position and is now too close to the side glass. I can fix that easily later on today or tomorrow.
What I am most pleased with is the fact that I have opened up the sand bed a lot compared to the previous arrangement. It was really fairly open before compared to most tanks but it is really wide open now. Open sand bed in front of the reef ranges from 9" to 5" with most of it being in the 7"-8" range. That's because the base footprint of the reef is much narrower than the superstructure.
I have preserved all of the cave systems and perhaps even improved them by removing some of the Buna Spiney rocks that were acting as partial front walls. The new arrangement is completely open throughtout the reef and yet much flatter on the top for placement of corals and clams. I honestly prefer the looks of the Kaelini anyway and wasn't too unhappy about removing the Buna Spiney that was hiding some of my nice Kaelini with all it's coralline and wormy critters.
Yesterday, about three hours after dumping the "very live sand" from Palmetto Reefs into my tank, the water was relatively clear and I figured I might take a few pictures to show off my new rock structure, but for some unknown reason I suddenly got the urge to rinse out the foam block and polyester filter pad in the Lifereef sump because it was obvious that both were really filled with silt from the new live sand addition. Big mistake! I should have turned off the pumps before even thinking about doing this, especially if I had any intention of taking any pictures anytime within the next three or four hours.
I tried to gently life out the pads without disturbing the silt they were holding. Well that worked reasonably well with the foam block but the polyester filter pad was another story altogether! I created another instant Southdown milkshake throughout the entire tank. Now I know where all the silt went that was bouncing around in the tank for the previous three hours. I should have turned off the pumps, removed the filter pads for rinsing in clean saltwater and at the same time siphoned out the entire sump and cleaned it. There is a good 1/4" thick layer of silt in the sump. That would have given me about an 18-gallon water change. I haven't done a water change yet because I wanted to get the sand bed cycled first but I really need to clean the sump now, so I guess my first water change will be today or tomorrow before my order from Inland Aquatics gets here.
There is a lot of sand on the rocks in these pictures because I didn't want to blow it off just now or I would have had to wait another couple of hours to take the pictures. The glass, especially the back glass, is pretty dirty with that Southdown film. The "very live sand" from Palmetto Reefs was a blend of Southdown sand, Florida Keys sand and Fiji sand that Darren cultures in his live rock curing tanks. It arrived in very good shape in a nice little styrofoam shipping container. There was about an inch of water above the surface of the sand and the bag of sand just exactly filled the interior of the container. The interior dimensions of the container are 6"x8"x7"deep and the exterior dimensions are 9"x11"x10"deep. The shipping weight was 14-lbs, so I guess I got a little lagniappe. It was shipped late Monday afternoon and was delivered to my house about mid-day Tuesday. There was "stuff" in it but my eyesight isn't good enough to give you a complete rundown.
OK, where are the pics, I thought there were supposed to be pics in this post?
Before:
After:
Before:
After:
After, but from an angle:
OK, that's my 5-pic limitfor this post so I have to submit this before I can put up some more pics.
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I am reasonably sure that I have not spotted any aiptasia. I have not spotted any crabs yet. If there're in there, they're hiding from me. So far no mantis shrimp or pistol shrimp, fortunately.
So one of us can't see worth a damn and the other one has no idea what he's looking at. 


And besides, what good is it to take a picture under actinic lights if the flash is going to go off and change everything? 









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