This has been a super encouraging video! It’s easy to watch all the other ‘pros’ telling you how to establish a tank with success, without ever really hearing them touch upon things that have gone wrong in their own experience. I’m also a beginner and currently cycling my tank, so only a couple of weeks in. But this video has been super refreshing and helpful to watch!
everyone has their ups and downs part of the hobby some of the stuff people recommend is quack stuff honestly you dont need a 200$ test kit just CHANGE 20-30% of the water every week (much cheaper)
@@thestrawberryaniahomegarde7228 its filled with dead organic matter / just use normal aquarium sand even black live rock is always good, add macro algae don't go crazy adding corals (better yet do none as chemical warfare poisons the tank)
Oh, boy. You caught the coral bug. Welcome to the party good Sir. You're in good company. It's looking good! It also sounds like your LFS is giving sound advice. Yes, saltwater will always take significantly longer to cycle. The "ugly phase" can also take much longer do to the myriad and sheer diversity of marine microbes and algae's that have to all fight through succession. It's not uncommon for Marine tanks to remain unstable for six months. And when it comes to stony corals and the tanks which house them, Reefers usually consider any tank under a full year to still be establishing itself. And the reason you start with fish and inverts first, and then coral. Is because coral are also animals. They have a symbiotic algae within them. But, the tank should fully support complex and resilient animals like fish, snails, or crabs, before it will support far more sensitive animals like corals. Technically, you can add corals day-1. But, that's better left to veteran reef keepers, as any small swing or instability will kill those day-1 corals. The other critical idea is that with coral: water flow is often more important than lighting. They are photosynthetic like plants, and their zooxanthellae use nutrients in much the same way; but they are animals with non-existent circulatory systems. That water flow is their circulatory system, so great choice with the Nero 3. And you're right. Saltwater really isn't more difficult than a planted tank. It's just slower paced, more work, and more research. With a few notable caveat's: When you get into highly sensitive corals like Acropora, their is a genuine difficulty spike in keeping stable water parameters. When people say "SPS are hard", they don't mean Stylophora or Montipora, that comment is specifically targeting the genus Acropora. The other are fish that have very specific diets are are difficult to feed in captivity, those take an extra level of care. Again there not harder, just more work and more research Anyway, I'll stop nerding out. It's just good to see a prominent planted tank creator jumping into reef tanks. And doing it the right way: through research and patience.
Hi MJ, it´s comming beautifull, congrats. Buying the auto top off was your best move as corals are really sensitive creatures. Having said that watch out, the xenia and green star polips are fast and furious when propagating. The harder the water flow the more they propagate. Green star polips do grow over the sand also.
This video may encourage me to add a salt water tank to my collection. If your tank has a removable grill, as the Fluval tanks do, I've added a piece of coarse foam in the back of the grill, which keeps the small critters from getting through. The same idea as putting a pre filter foam on the intake of your HOB filter.
is certainly an expensive hobby. I just point out to him that he has aiptasia. he can also get red sea aiptasia x. then you run the risk of making it worse. and the Nudibranch tackles the source immediately.
I used to watch your videos back in my planted freshwater days. Just started my first reef tank and look who showed up on my feed. As before, thanks for sharing your insight.
Great progress! My first reef tank looked worse. 😂 I really like how you stick for simple corals for now. Softies are fascinating. Although losing a fish is always hard it‘s a good und thing that you learned something from this. I lost a Elacatinus goby (the blue one) as well a few years ago - similar story - it jumped thrugh a tiny gap of my lid.
i cut a bio media cloth bag, and use the netting to block the filter intake holes, i use black cable tape to stick it on. I have malaysian trumpet snails and didn't want them to get in the filter, i mean the babies still do, but i prevents 90% of them from getting in. Also prevents fish from getting in there.
A couple pearly jaw fish would be a nice addition to the scape. They tend to stick to the bottom of the tank and can form a group, just be sure to add them in groups of two or more if you do
I switched my 400 litre tank to a reef tank. I absolutely love corals and marine fish. They are very expensive but also very beautiful. I still have a small 30 litre tank though with a betta
About why they recommend to put fish in first, remember that corals are animals too - they add bio-load to the tank, rather than acting as biological filtration the way that plants do. Plus corals tend to be more sensitive to water chemistry fluctuations than fish are.
Heterotrophic organisms add bioload to the tank, not just a simple distinction between animals and plants. Corals are autotrophic, utilising the sun as a "food source", therefore they do not produce "bioload" in the same way fishes do.
@@bryanwong8476 It's not the food source that really matters here. It's that they produce waste, like nitrogen and phosphorous, which then need to be removed from the water in some way. Plants, on the other hand, will consume nitrates and phosphates produced by animals like fish and corals, thereby acting as part of the filtration system, rather than adding more things the filtration system needs to remove. Also, it's important to remember that corals both utilize photosynthesis through the symbiotic zooxanthellae that they host, AND eat phytoplankton, zooplankton, and sometimes even larger animals like shrimp, depending on the polyp size. Not to mention that not all corals are photosynthetic. Most of the ones we keep in the hobby are, but not all of them.
Congrats MJ on the beautiful reef tank! Recently I started my first salt water nano tank too, a fluval sea evo 13.5. This video brings me a lot of inspiration for different corals. I look forward to seeing more progress as fish are added and time goes on.
Congrats for not giving up, it is a bit difficult in the trial and error stage of a small reef. As for a fish, I would recommend a watchman/shrimp goby of some sort, they are not very active as they will sit in front of a burrow guarding a pistol shrimp as it digs a burrow for them so they are unlikely to jump out or get stuck in the overflow drain. Happy reefing!
I started my first saltwater a few months ago after 15 years of having freshwater tanks. Boy was I missing out! Corals and saltwater fish are beautiful and maintenance really isn't as hard as it seems.
You can solve one problem just by attaching a piece of filter sponge to the intake with super glue. Congrats on getting the tank up and running! It already looks pretty good as it is. Can't wait to see how it develops
7:20 in almost any reef tank no matter what you need flow for any coral which is likely why you coral died unless it was water parameters but I’m proud that you showed your trial and error because it can help others learn too! I’m still learning myself still after all! 😁 9:12 that also can be the reason, some dips can be great for getting rid of pests but not so great for the corals themselves… I still haven’t found a good dip myself 😂
Beautiful reef tank. As for fish suggestions, the Blue Chromis (Chromis cyaneus) and the Pyjama Cardinal Fish (Sphaeramia nematoptera) are both easy and popular options for Nano reef tanks, and they are unlikely to attempt to escape.
Looking good auto top off or one of the best things to have on a saltwater tank I would not worry about a protein skimmer in your tank and just do water changes to keep nitrates down you could put a filter sponge pad behind the grates, so the fish cannot go down
Thanks so much for this. Ive been meaning to delve into saltwater too and now have a little bit more courage. Glad the Oceonàrio in my home country inspired you so much. It's a beautiful exhibition.
Great start, you got some quality parts. I highly recommend doing a par test, and be careful with those pulsating xenias and green star polyps. They are consider pest corals for a reason.
Now I recommend get macroalgea before considering fish. Macroalgea does look very good and help balance tank so algea issues are less likely to occur or parameter issues
Beautiful tank and its really satisfying to see it come alive. Not sure if you have already noticed but there seems to be an aiptasia anemone on the fragplug where your pulsing xenia is. It’d be good to try and remove your xenias from that fragplug before the aiptasia spreads.
I came here to mention this. Especially because there were Aiptasia all over the fish store corals and multiple more frags you added in your aquarium. I would look into Berghia Nudibranchs so you know where to get them if it gets real bad but for now treat with Aiptasia X or Joe’s juice. Aiptasia can quickly take over a tank and it’s not fun. Good luck with your new reef tank!
Hey MJ your waterbox is looking fantastic! One thing though - some of your corals came with aptasia on them. I can see one on the Kenya Tree and one on the Xenia.
Always have fun watching your videos with the girlfriend! We setup our first nano about two and a half months back and it is going well. 75 g coming up next with G. Sveni's and some other larger tetras; and talks of a small saltwater tank too. Thanks for sharing and the hard work!
Good luck...Running a freshwater and a saltwater are worlds apart. With a freshwater tank it's a hobby. With a saltwater tank, it's your full time job....😄, BRSTV has some of the best tips and advice videos. Would definitely recommend seeing them.
Very nice progress! I would recommend a Springer's damsel. They are a striking blue color and are one of the smallest and most peaceful damselfish. They are also known to eat pests such as flatworms.
Nice job, watch out for that pulsing zenia, they're the pearl weed of saltwater tanks. and I highly recommend getting a randall's prawn goby, with a pistol shrimp. at least mine has a great personality.
I would suggest starting with a small ocellaris clownfish. Classic and tough as nails. Then, maybe one or two "nano" fish. Be careful not to overstock fish in a small tank. I'd focus on inverts and corals. Especially without a skimmer.
Welcome to the dark side! I have a few nano fish suggestions. A lot of people may recommend clown fish, and it will work. But I do warn you, they will bite your hand as they get older, and it will not only sting, your hand will bleed! Cardinal fish will do well in your tank. They are peaceful. Maybe 2 of them would be fine in there. Other suggestions are Clown Gobies, Firefish, Possum Wrasse, and Damselfish. Some varieties of firefish and damsels are very colorful and you might enjoy them.
Hi, great video! Glad it worked out for you in the end. I would suggest getting a fish you like the look of that is hardy or inexpensive. I think 2 clownfish could be okay but the tank size you have may be too small, thats if you want them to thrive. I would suggest getting something like a damsel or blenny or even dottyback. Damsel and dottybacks can be aggressive but if you only have the one fish you are safe.
Just getting my first 20 gallon salt water tank set up started. We have had fresh water set ups for years now. Currently run a 30 and a 75 gallon freshwater set up. So this is new and we are doing our research to see what will work best for this size tank and how to be successful with salt water. We are starting with a dragon wrasse and would like to add some coral after a short while. What are the easiest coral to start out with, as far as acre and a hearty, hopefully fast growing species?
Eindelijk een update😃 iet er prachtig uit. Ik ben ongeveer rond de zelfde tijd met mijn eerste zout water begonnen. Eigenlijk doordat jij er mee begon deed ik het ook maar. In mijn mening is het wel een stapje hoger dan zoetwater kwa stabiliteit maar super leuk en mooi(er). Jouw bak ziet er echt top uit hoop echt dat die van mij er ook zo mooi uit gaat zien❤️
I'd suggest blue or yellow assessor basslet or yellow banded possom wrasse. I'd remove the pulsing xenia, that stuff spreads like wildfire. Best of luck.
Hello brother, I also have waterbox cube 10. Do your system have lid? Same which is shown in this video or anyother if yes can you share company name or buying link. It will be very helpfull thank you.
You're an awesome aquarist (is that the term?) Fwiw bacterial cycle in marine tanks is like 10 weeks and there's a concept called succession which means "stages" of bacterial evolution which brings biodiversity and stability
There is a competitor of Waterbox, that makes a overflow gaurd to go over the weir opening. It would allow you to choose any fish you would like to add.
I love the tank, only think im not a fan of with reef tanks is the lighting the blue blue lights are just ugly. So glad you ran it on white lights mainly.
Heater on 26 ? I recommend you 25, temp also have influence on salinity (but this is an Oase one so maybe you set it up to 26 to have 25 because they do have a large delta from what you want and what they deliver) Also, for corals, a dip is indeed a good thing, but if they are already really stressed it's better to have visual inspection then skip the dip if it looks "fine". Also, temp acclimation is all you need for them, no need to drip acclimate Can also spot an aiptasia, you want to remove it before it spread (aiptasia X or natural solution like lysmata wurdemanni)
Great video! Reefing is a lot of work but it’s amazing to see the journey it takes to grow coral, for fish I’d love to see maybe a waspfish and a sapphire damsel or a yellow striped cardinal pair and goby pistol shrimp pair
Paar tips, ik zag wat glasanemonen. Pak deze zo snel mogelijk aan met red sea aptasia-x ook die caulerpa ga je spijt van krijgen als je die er niet uit haalt en van plan bent meer koralen te nemen, een dokter is je systeem te klein voor dus dan kom je er niet meer van af, zal een plaag worden - tof om te zien dat je de zoutwater kant ook een kans hebt gegeven owja niet moeilijker' wacht maar tot je in de sps wereld stapt' :p
Prachtige winkel ocean and lake, op jou aanbevelingen al 2 keer langs geweest. Mijn handen tintele om ook eens zout water te proberen. Maar durf het 'nog' niet. Ze hadden daar wel 60 liter bakken in de aanbieding staan
Be careful with pulsing xenia. They Are known for being aggressive to other corals and "quickly" (compared to freshwater the grow slow ofc lol) overtaking the space in the tank.
thats what makes it a perfect "beginner" coral though its practically invasive 😅 maybe move it to its own "island" and have small rocks for it to spread to then when the time comes you have frags to trade no cutting required
Nice relaxed video, thank you for that! I would also appreciate a video with the routines like cleaning etc. Also where did you buy that shelve? I want one of them to put my mini aquariums. It looks fantastic!
That is beautiful! Definitely seems like more work but is amazing to look at! You should get some shrimp to help as a cleaning crew when you get the fish. I live in Michigan in the United States so I know about freshwater only. We have a lot of it here.
Looks so cool! I never knew you could make a small salt water tank until you set up the macro algae one, and really didn't know you could make a small coral reef tank. It's looking beautiful and magical already. I have no idea about salt water fish, big or small!
Glad you didn't give up, it's starting to look nice. I'm now about to attempt my first reef, not sure whether to go for a shallow reef or something more traditional though?
Looks amazing...but I would need to think seriously about going down this route as it looks difficult. Having the issues you had early on even as a very experienced freshwater aquarist.
Als ik een tip mag geven, verwijdere die gele spijkerpoliepen (rechts boven) word een pest. Pompende Xenia zou ik op de achterwand bevestigen, verspreid met tijd heel hard en als dat op de achterwand staat is het makkelijker te onder houden. Voor vissen is het ook allemaal te zien waar je naar toe wil... Ik had ooit een nano met een koppel zeenaalden. echt prachtig om ze te zien zwemmen. Mag je wel niet TE veel stroming voor hebben. Verder kan je kijken bij de 'blennies' en 'gobies' heb je wel al slechte ervaring mee, je kan wel een stuk filterflos voor de 'uitstroom' van je aqua hangen wat ze tegen houd en zo filter je veel 'vliegend' stof/vuil op ook in je aqua. Bij de 'pitvissen' heb je heel mooie exemplaren. Moet je bak wel minimaal 1Jaar voor draaien. Bij de pijlvissen heb je ook mooi exemplaren. Verder had ik ook een nano met daarin 1 Valentini kogel vis. leukste vis die ik ooit gehad heb. heel nieuwschierig en kwam ook uit de hand eten. Ik hoop dat je aan deze info wat hebt.
So glad that you had such amazing success with this tank! It is beautiful, and the corals are mesmerizing to watch. Excited to see what fish you decide on. Hopefully the next fish isn't an escape artist lol
Wonderful recap of your first 100 days! The tank is gorgeous and you picked out some great corals for the system. If I were to recommend a fish for the setup, I would look at a tail spot blenny or some type of smaller blenny. Most sw tend to get big but a tail spot would be a fun perching fish on that aquascape you have. Keep it up!
Ready for the second hundred days... 😊🙏🍀🎈 Will see if I want to try this level.. Thx for the first one! Scotty on Maui. We have Whales!! All winter! 🐳😉
This has been a super encouraging video! It’s easy to watch all the other ‘pros’ telling you how to establish a tank with success, without ever really hearing them touch upon things that have gone wrong in their own experience. I’m also a beginner and currently cycling my tank, so only a couple of weeks in. But this video has been super refreshing and helpful to watch!
everyone has their ups and downs
part of the hobby
some of the stuff people recommend is quack stuff honestly
you dont need a 200$ test kit
just CHANGE 20-30% of the water every week (much cheaper)
biospira works, "live sand" is always a no-go
@@jonniefastwhy? Can you explain? Every video I watched recommended live sand. I don't want to make a huge mistake from the beginning
@@thestrawberryaniahomegarde7228 its filled with dead organic matter / just use normal aquarium sand even black
live rock is always good, add macro algae
don't go crazy adding corals (better yet do none as chemical warfare poisons the tank)
Don’t be afraid to cycle your tank for an entire year when your starting, wish I did.
Oh, boy. You caught the coral bug. Welcome to the party good Sir. You're in good company.
It's looking good!
It also sounds like your LFS is giving sound advice. Yes, saltwater will always take significantly longer to cycle. The "ugly phase" can also take much longer do to the myriad and sheer diversity of marine microbes and algae's that have to all fight through succession. It's not uncommon for Marine tanks to remain unstable for six months. And when it comes to stony corals and the tanks which house them, Reefers usually consider any tank under a full year to still be establishing itself.
And the reason you start with fish and inverts first, and then coral. Is because coral are also animals. They have a symbiotic algae within them. But, the tank should fully support complex and resilient animals like fish, snails, or crabs, before it will support far more sensitive animals like corals. Technically, you can add corals day-1. But, that's better left to veteran reef keepers, as any small swing or instability will kill those day-1 corals. The other critical idea is that with coral: water flow is often more important than lighting. They are photosynthetic like plants, and their zooxanthellae use nutrients in much the same way; but they are animals with non-existent circulatory systems. That water flow is their circulatory system, so great choice with the Nero 3.
And you're right. Saltwater really isn't more difficult than a planted tank. It's just slower paced, more work, and more research.
With a few notable caveat's: When you get into highly sensitive corals like Acropora, their is a genuine difficulty spike in keeping stable water parameters. When people say "SPS are hard", they don't mean Stylophora or Montipora, that comment is specifically targeting the genus Acropora. The other are fish that have very specific diets are are difficult to feed in captivity, those take an extra level of care. Again there not harder, just more work and more research
Anyway, I'll stop nerding out. It's just good to see a prominent planted tank creator jumping into reef tanks. And doing it the right way: through research and patience.
Thank you for showing us that things went wrong for you! Super encouraging.
Hi MJ, it´s comming beautifull, congrats. Buying the auto top off was your best move as corals are really sensitive creatures. Having said that watch out, the xenia and green star polips are fast and furious when propagating. The harder the water flow the more they propagate. Green star polips do grow over the sand also.
I have been Reefing for 30 years. I love your excitement. Good on you!
This video may encourage me to add a salt water tank to my collection. If your tank has a removable grill, as the Fluval tanks do, I've added a piece of coarse foam in the back of the grill, which keeps the small critters from getting through. The same idea as putting a pre filter foam on the intake of your HOB filter.
another step would be to spam the foam that soaks phosphate/nitrate and swap it every month or so
i get mine at an aquarium supply store
15$ lasts about 7 months (you cut it yourself to size)
thats it. thats the final straw. I'm buying a 10 gallon cube. saltwater nano reef. im doing it. my wife will not stop me.
Go a bit bigger, will be easier I promise
🫡
Its been 8 months, what's the new? Tell me you did it.
@@jax6230wrong
howe is it
Its official. You're a Reefer!
Whooop! 😎
is certainly an expensive hobby. I just point out to him that he has aiptasia. he can also get red sea aiptasia x. then you run the risk of making it worse. and the Nudibranch tackles the source immediately.
You are very skilled at aquascaping! The bookshelf and tanks look splendid! I think I miss having a reef tank now!
Reefer madness
Good for you for persevering with this tank. Looking beautiful!
Thanks Nancy :)
I used to watch your videos back in my planted freshwater days. Just started my first reef tank and look who showed up on my feed. As before, thanks for sharing your insight.
Great progress! My first reef tank looked worse. 😂
I really like how you stick for simple corals for now. Softies are fascinating.
Although losing a fish is always hard it‘s a good und thing that you learned something from this. I lost a Elacatinus goby (the blue one) as well a few years ago - similar story - it jumped thrugh a tiny gap of my lid.
Beautiful reef aquascape 🐟
Thank you kindly
@MJAquascaping Thank you. You have inspired me to get into the fish keeping hobby. Im starting my first shrimp tank next week🪸
i cut a bio media cloth bag, and use the netting to block the filter intake holes, i use black cable tape to stick it on. I have malaysian trumpet snails and didn't want them to get in the filter, i mean the babies still do, but i prevents 90% of them from getting in. Also prevents fish from getting in there.
reminds me
of my first saltwater tank! Sadly i sold it years ago but this video is making me wanna revisit saltwater again ohhhh boy
so beautiful, please do an update of this tank soon! I'm now week 2 of my saltwater journey also and I'm pretty sure my tank is not cycled yet.
A couple pearly jaw fish would be a nice addition to the scape. They tend to stick to the bottom of the tank and can form a group, just be sure to add them in groups of two or more if you do
Tank too small for jawfish
@@notwoke1041 for blue spots maybe, but for pearly/yellow heads it’s a fine size. Besides they only occupy the sandbed and not the water column
I would recommend spotted blenny and yellow goby. Super small with big personalities and reef safe.
I switched my 400 litre tank to a reef tank. I absolutely love corals and marine fish. They are very expensive but also very beautiful. I still have a small 30 litre tank though with a betta
About why they recommend to put fish in first, remember that corals are animals too - they add bio-load to the tank, rather than acting as biological filtration the way that plants do. Plus corals tend to be more sensitive to water chemistry fluctuations than fish are.
Heterotrophic organisms add bioload to the tank, not just a simple distinction between animals and plants. Corals are autotrophic, utilising the sun as a "food source", therefore they do not produce "bioload" in the same way fishes do.
@@bryanwong8476 It's not the food source that really matters here. It's that they produce waste, like nitrogen and phosphorous, which then need to be removed from the water in some way. Plants, on the other hand, will consume nitrates and phosphates produced by animals like fish and corals, thereby acting as part of the filtration system, rather than adding more things the filtration system needs to remove.
Also, it's important to remember that corals both utilize photosynthesis through the symbiotic zooxanthellae that they host, AND eat phytoplankton, zooplankton, and sometimes even larger animals like shrimp, depending on the polyp size. Not to mention that not all corals are photosynthetic. Most of the ones we keep in the hobby are, but not all of them.
Congrats MJ on the beautiful reef tank! Recently I started my first salt water nano tank too, a fluval sea evo 13.5. This video brings me a lot of inspiration for different corals. I look forward to seeing more progress as fish are added and time goes on.
The Waterbox is a nice choice. I have the 20 and even though I’m still doing freshwater I also put a mini ATO on it. It just makes it easier.
Great tank
The first mushrooms are rhodactis mushrooms
the green ones are rhodactis as well just the green fuzzy type, again great tank mate cheers
Congrats for not giving up, it is a bit difficult in the trial and error stage of a small reef. As for a fish, I would recommend a watchman/shrimp goby of some sort, they are not very active as they will sit in front of a burrow guarding a pistol shrimp as it digs a burrow for them so they are unlikely to jump out or get stuck in the overflow drain. Happy reefing!
I started my first saltwater a few months ago after 15 years of having freshwater tanks. Boy was I missing out! Corals and saltwater fish are beautiful and maintenance really isn't as hard as it seems.
You can solve one problem just by attaching a piece of filter sponge to the intake with super glue. Congrats on getting the tank up and running! It already looks pretty good as it is. Can't wait to see how it develops
7:20 in almost any reef tank no matter what you need flow for any coral which is likely why you coral died unless it was water parameters but I’m proud that you showed your trial and error because it can help others learn too! I’m still learning myself still after all! 😁
9:12 that also can be the reason, some dips can be great for getting rid of pests but not so great for the corals themselves… I still haven’t found a good dip myself 😂
That looks amazing, well done for persevering with it.
Man you motivated me to build and make my first saltwater reef
Beautiful reef tank.
As for fish suggestions, the Blue Chromis (Chromis cyaneus) and the Pyjama Cardinal Fish (Sphaeramia nematoptera) are both easy and popular options for Nano reef tanks, and they are unlikely to attempt to escape.
It's looking good! Kept big salt water tank for years. Miss it. Cardinal would look nice,small & easy!
Looking good auto top off or one of the best things to have on a saltwater tank I would not worry about a protein skimmer in your tank and just do water changes to keep nitrates down you could put a filter sponge pad behind the grates, so the fish cannot go down
Very cool video!
I'm very inspired to start my own small tank now.
You given me inspiration to try this. Now that i got more time on my hands im going to try this out and hope it comes out as a good result
Thanks so much for this. Ive been meaning to delve into saltwater too and now have a little bit more courage. Glad the Oceonàrio in my home country inspired you so much. It's a beautiful exhibition.
Great start, you got some quality parts. I highly recommend doing a par test, and be careful with those pulsating xenias and green star polyps. They are consider pest corals for a reason.
So beautiful!! Congrats on 100 days and looking forward to seeing what fish you get. Enjoy your holiday ☺️
Thanks so much!
Now I recommend get macroalgea before considering fish. Macroalgea does look very good and help balance tank so algea issues are less likely to occur or parameter issues
Beautiful tank and its really satisfying to see it come alive. Not sure if you have already noticed but there seems to be an aiptasia anemone on the fragplug where your pulsing xenia is. It’d be good to try and remove your xenias from that fragplug before the aiptasia spreads.
I came here to mention this. Especially because there were Aiptasia all over the fish store corals and multiple more frags you added in your aquarium. I would look into Berghia Nudibranchs so you know where to get them if it gets real bad but for now treat with Aiptasia X or Joe’s juice. Aiptasia can quickly take over a tank and it’s not fun. Good luck with your new reef tank!
Thats a awedacious documentary MJ..Cheers ..Thoroughly enjoyed the process
Hey MJ your waterbox is looking fantastic! One thing though - some of your corals came with aptasia on them. I can see one on the Kenya Tree and one on the Xenia.
a peppermint shrimp will remove them all in a week or two
then take it back or gift it to a friend
i dont trust inverts with corals lol
nature likes to munch on expensive tankmates too often
Did you see what happened in Gaza and Palestine? 😢
@@jonniefastDid you see what happened in Gaza and Palestine? 😢
@@selimelasad8435 what happened?
Always have fun watching your videos with the girlfriend! We setup our first nano about two and a half months back and it is going well. 75 g coming up next with G. Sveni's and some other larger tetras; and talks of a small saltwater tank too. Thanks for sharing and the hard work!
What a journey you have been on. Thanks for sharing. The corals are beautiful. Look forward to seeing what fish you choose. Enjoy your vacation.
The pulsing ones are wild! It all looks so good!
Absolutely beautiful, congrats man!
Great job not giving up! I’m so afraid to enter salt water.. looking to master my fresh water skills first.
Kudos to your patience, you wil go long way!
Good luck...Running a freshwater and a saltwater are worlds apart. With a freshwater tank it's a hobby. With a saltwater tank, it's your full time job....😄, BRSTV has some of the best tips and advice videos. Would definitely recommend seeing them.
Very nice progress! I would recommend a Springer's damsel. They are a striking blue color and are one of the smallest and most peaceful damselfish. They are also known to eat pests such as flatworms.
On rare occasion that we dipped at the Aquarium, it was only a 2-5 minute dip. Depending on how sensitive the coral was.
"Rare occasion"? Always dip your corals
Nice job, watch out for that pulsing zenia, they're the pearl weed of saltwater tanks. and I highly recommend getting a randall's prawn goby, with a pistol shrimp. at least mine has a great personality.
Superb man ........love your scape.........yes that's the expectation from Planted Tank experts ........
I would suggest starting with a small ocellaris clownfish. Classic and tough as nails. Then, maybe one or two "nano" fish. Be careful not to overstock fish in a small tank. I'd focus on inverts and corals. Especially without a skimmer.
Looks beautiful. you better isolate the Pumping Xenia Coral because it easy to grow, and spreads pretty rapidly.
Welcome to the dark side! I have a few nano fish suggestions. A lot of people may recommend clown fish, and it will work. But I do warn you, they will bite your hand as they get older, and it will not only sting, your hand will bleed! Cardinal fish will do well in your tank. They are peaceful. Maybe 2 of them would be fine in there. Other suggestions are Clown Gobies, Firefish, Possum Wrasse, and Damselfish. Some varieties of firefish and damsels are very colorful and you might enjoy them.
I just started my first nano reef. Thanks for the tips.I like your video.
Good luck!
Great job research is everything and you choose the the right easy starter corals. 👏 Great job
Hi, great video! Glad it worked out for you in the end. I would suggest getting a fish you like the look of that is hardy or inexpensive. I think 2 clownfish could be okay but the tank size you have may be too small, thats if you want them to thrive. I would suggest getting something like a damsel or blenny or even dottyback. Damsel and dottybacks can be aggressive but if you only have the one fish you are safe.
Just getting my first 20 gallon salt water tank set up started. We have had fresh water set ups for years now. Currently run a 30 and a 75 gallon freshwater set up. So this is new and we are doing our research to see what will work best for this size tank and how to be successful with salt water.
We are starting with a dragon wrasse and would like to add some coral after a short while.
What are the easiest coral to start out with, as far as acre and a hearty, hopefully fast growing species?
Looks beautiful. I hope we get a full fish shop tour video when you go to get the inhabitants.
Eindelijk een update😃 iet er prachtig uit. Ik ben ongeveer rond de zelfde tijd met mijn eerste zout water begonnen. Eigenlijk doordat jij er mee begon deed ik het ook maar. In mijn mening is het wel een stapje hoger dan zoetwater kwa stabiliteit maar super leuk en mooi(er). Jouw bak ziet er echt top uit hoop echt dat die van mij er ook zo mooi uit gaat zien❤️
I'd suggest blue or yellow assessor basslet or yellow banded possom wrasse. I'd remove the pulsing xenia, that stuff spreads like wildfire. Best of luck.
Looks great, Mark. I can't wait to see how it turns out in the future. Enjoy your holiday.
I have exactly same.system waterbox cube 10 with nero 3 , however i have AI prime 16hd light, looking good keep us updated
Hello brother, I also have waterbox cube 10. Do your system have lid? Same which is shown in this video or anyother if yes can you share company name or buying link. It will be very helpfull thank you.
You're an awesome aquarist (is that the term?) Fwiw bacterial cycle in marine tanks is like 10 weeks and there's a concept called succession which means "stages" of bacterial evolution which brings biodiversity and stability
There is a competitor of Waterbox, that makes a overflow gaurd to go over the weir opening. It would allow you to choose any fish you would like to add.
And..the..name..please😂
Nice mj great to see an update. Good on you for pushing through those discouraging moments
I just started my first nano reef. let's see how it will goes. Thanks for the tips.
I love the tank, only think im not a fan of with reef tanks is the lighting the blue blue lights are just ugly. So glad you ran it on white lights mainly.
Finally!! i was waiting for this update! Nicely done Mj, hope you create a in depth tutorial for beginners...really want to start Saltwater too
Heater on 26 ? I recommend you 25, temp also have influence on salinity (but this is an Oase one so maybe you set it up to 26 to have 25 because they do have a large delta from what you want and what they deliver)
Also, for corals, a dip is indeed a good thing, but if they are already really stressed it's better to have visual inspection then skip the dip if it looks "fine". Also, temp acclimation is all you need for them, no need to drip acclimate
Can also spot an aiptasia, you want to remove it before it spread (aiptasia X or natural solution like lysmata wurdemanni)
Nice looking salt water tank😊 had pancakes eggs bacon n coffee watching youtube😊😅
Loved watching and learning from your experience. Maybe one day i'll take the plunge into marine aquariums.
Great video! Reefing is a lot of work but it’s amazing to see the journey it takes to grow coral, for fish I’d love to see maybe a waspfish and a sapphire damsel or a yellow striped cardinal pair and goby pistol shrimp pair
Can’t wait to see what fish you get for your stunning tank
Paar tips, ik zag wat glasanemonen. Pak deze zo snel mogelijk aan met red sea aptasia-x ook die caulerpa ga je spijt van krijgen als je die er niet uit haalt en van plan bent meer koralen te nemen, een dokter is je systeem te klein voor dus dan kom je er niet meer van af, zal een plaag worden - tof om te zien dat je de zoutwater kant ook een kans hebt gegeven owja niet moeilijker' wacht maar tot je in de sps wereld stapt' :p
Prachtige winkel ocean and lake, op jou aanbevelingen al 2 keer langs geweest. Mijn handen tintele om ook eens zout water te proberen. Maar durf het 'nog' niet. Ze hadden daar wel 60 liter bakken in de aanbieding staan
Go on with a bule based light where you can get really cool colours from ur corals
i’m starting mines soon, i’m so excited
Be careful with pulsing xenia. They Are known for being aggressive to other corals and "quickly" (compared to freshwater the grow slow ofc lol) overtaking the space in the tank.
thats what makes it a perfect "beginner" coral though
its practically invasive 😅
maybe move it to its own "island" and have small rocks for it to spread to
then when the time comes you have frags to trade no cutting required
Great video, thanks for this. How do you handle keeping your tanks going when you go on holiday?
Nice relaxed video, thank you for that! I would also appreciate a video with the routines like cleaning etc. Also where did you buy that shelve? I want one of them to put my mini aquariums. It looks fantastic!
Thanks Mark, good stuff. Makes me want to try a reef tank. Space and money. And time. Pesky little problems :)
That is beautiful! Definitely seems like more work but is amazing to look at! You should get some shrimp to help as a cleaning crew when you get the fish. I live in Michigan in the United States so I know about freshwater only. We have a lot of it here.
Do you think it would have been easier to cycle and maintain the tank if the tank was larger?
Looks so cool! I never knew you could make a small salt water tank until you set up the macro algae one, and really didn't know you could make a small coral reef tank. It's looking beautiful and magical already. I have no idea about salt water fish, big or small!
Did you see what happened in Gaza and Palestine? 😢
With all respect... NOTHING compares with the beautiful world of aquascaping.
Glad you didn't give up, it's starting to look nice. I'm now about to attempt my first reef, not sure whether to go for a shallow reef or something more traditional though?
Looks amazing...but I would need to think seriously about going down this route as it looks difficult. Having the issues you had early on even as a very experienced freshwater aquarist.
Really enjoyed ur reef tank journey.
Als ik een tip mag geven, verwijdere die gele spijkerpoliepen (rechts boven) word een pest.
Pompende Xenia zou ik op de achterwand bevestigen, verspreid met tijd heel hard en als dat op de achterwand staat is het makkelijker te onder houden.
Voor vissen is het ook allemaal te zien waar je naar toe wil...
Ik had ooit een nano met een koppel zeenaalden. echt prachtig om ze te zien zwemmen. Mag je wel niet TE veel stroming voor hebben.
Verder kan je kijken bij de 'blennies' en 'gobies' heb je wel al slechte ervaring mee, je kan wel een stuk filterflos voor de 'uitstroom' van je aqua hangen wat ze tegen houd en zo filter je veel 'vliegend' stof/vuil op ook in je aqua.
Bij de 'pitvissen' heb je heel mooie exemplaren. Moet je bak wel minimaal 1Jaar voor draaien.
Bij de pijlvissen heb je ook mooi exemplaren.
Verder had ik ook een nano met daarin 1 Valentini kogel vis. leukste vis die ik ooit gehad heb. heel nieuwschierig en kwam ook uit de hand eten.
Ik hoop dat je aan deze info wat hebt.
Heb ik zeker wat aan! Dankjewel 😊
Mashaallah suuuper pretty results 😍💘
be careful that pulsing xenia will take over that whole rock structure if its left on that rock, I'd recommend you put that in the sand
I would recommend not using xenia at all. Individual palms can leave the main plant and land and grow elsewhere
beautiful! can't wait till you add the fish!
My friend, welcome, but you will never escape it now. Coral is just too addictive lmao
That Xenia has potential to take over the tank. You’ll have to keep on top of it.
So glad that you had such amazing success with this tank! It is beautiful, and the corals are mesmerizing to watch. Excited to see what fish you decide on. Hopefully the next fish isn't an escape artist lol
Brooooo! This looks amazing...
Now i have one more hobby to overspend on..
Always thought aquascaping was my thing, i guess saltwater too
Wonderful recap of your first 100 days! The tank is gorgeous and you picked out some great corals for the system. If I were to recommend a fish for the setup, I would look at a tail spot blenny or some type of smaller blenny. Most sw tend to get big but a tail spot would be a fun perching fish on that aquascape you have. Keep it up!
So happy to see you getting into saltwater. I love seeing a freshwater perspective in the saltwater hobby
Ready for the second hundred days... 😊🙏🍀🎈
Will see if I want to try this level.. Thx for the first one!
Scotty on Maui. We have Whales!!
All winter! 🐳😉