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bye bye to the hobby

3K views 13 replies 9 participants last post by  onefish2fish 
#1 ·
it's been 17 years in the making and now i've decided to hang up my reef gloves. Gonna be traveling more with my wife since the last child is out of the nest. I won't be able to keep a full blown reef when traveling so much so I end on a positive note and i've donated all my live stock and all my hardware to the local museum who just got a $100 million grant to build a huge reef aquarium and was looking for aquaculture corals from the pacific.. It's been a great hobby and i've met many friends. so now i say good bye to a hobby i love. here's a couple videos of my tank at it's ultimate peak.





:lol::lol:
 
#2 ·
ohhh wow!!

that is sad and fantastic at the same time. Maybe in the future you could share your travel adventures here on the forum for us to live vicariously through them.
 
#3 ·
ohhh wow!!

that is sad and fantastic at the same time. Maybe in the future you could share your travel adventures here on the forum for us to live vicariously through them.
why sad? i already travel tons in around europe, asia, hawaii, canada, alaska and love that too. i could post some pics here if you'd like. i got pics of many places ive been.
 
#11 ·
Yep, I'm going to volunteer some time in helping the marine biologist at the museum. There's plenty of work there to be done and he needs help with the maintenance of the show tanks. He suggested I get scuba certified so I could be one of a select few who would be able to dive in the show tank and help to move/maintain the tank once it's built. I don't know about that but it does sound interesting! But it's definitely nice to be able to go back to the museum and see my other " children"!:lol::lol:
 
#7 ·
Beautiful videos :-D Good luck on your traveling plans, are you guys planning on doing traveling around the US? My parents are planning on doing more traveling themselves after my dad retires in the next year or so. They already have their RV which they purchased a few years back and making plans on places that they would like to go.
 
#8 ·
I'm not retiring from work just the hobby. While we are young, We travel a lot to other countries for pleasure and as we get older we will opt for USA. btw tell your parents if the go to Florida via rv to try nova campground. That's one of the nicest ones in fl that we've been to.
 
#9 ·
Reefsahoy,
i know we have not interacted much over these last few months since i took my break from the salt. but i feel its important for me to say thank you for all of your advice and knowledge. you are part of the reason i decided to work on my build in progress and for that i am grateful. your tank is an inspiration to those of use just starting out and you will be missed.

thank you for all that you have done to help me on my way the first time and for the references i consistently go back too moving forward.
 
#10 ·
Thanks to all well wishers and thanks for the compliments bear. My most successful tank, the one in the video, was actually the simplest setup I've had. There are many different ways to skin the same cat. IMHO To be successful in reef keeping I'd suggest the 4 main tools are a good skimmer, good lighting, live rock and good water movement. Some say the more rock the better but aesthetics is important and I don't necessarily believe that theory. If you keep your bioload low then you will need less rock, if your skimmer is oversized you will also require less rock.

That tank had the above 4 tools plus other tools to keep maintenance to a minimum. Low bioload, only a few fish in 100 gallons. A ca reactor for upkeep of ca, alk, and mg, a auto top off for evaporation replacement, an auto feeder, and phosphate chamber. That's all I had in the tank. Then check your big three and adjust as necessary mg, ca, alk. Everything else should fall into place from there. Then from there do you monthly water change and success should be there. If you look closely you'll see that I had 2 small island of rock and not the usual wall of rocks along the back glass. That was all the rocks I had in the tank.

Cheers and thanks again
Reefs ahoy
 
#12 ·
Your tank is still to this day one of the most if not THE most beautiful SPS dominant tank I've ever seen. Great work and very noble of you to donate it all to the museum!

Happy travels!!!
 
#13 ·
Thanks for the compliments, I just just found out that the museum is building a new stand and that they are going to put up my/their new tank and display all the livestock I just donated. That's pretty awesome! I'll go back just to see how they chose to do it!
 
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