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| | #1 (permalink) |
| Tubeworm | Your advice on building a dream coral farm It's been ten years since I kept my reef tank; my memory is hazy and I'm sure there is plenty of new technology out there. My question: If you had a healthy budget to do so, what equipment and design would you choose for a coral farm? I'm thinking of a rack system (as seen on the GARF site) with mutiple tiers of specimens attached to plugs. I'd like to draw upon the wisdom and experience of the community; taking into account all of the practical advice of veterans regarding the plumbing, accessibility, lighting, filtration, skimming, etc -- so that I can benefit from all of your "if I had it to do all over again..." insight. My experience, limited as it is, taught me that ease of setup and maintenance is a key element. I also know that the two rules of this hobby are 1) start small and go slow and 2) don't screw with it too much. ![]() Although I'm not interested in purchasing every unproven "gee-whiz" gizmo, assume money is no object. What would you buy and how would you design it? My main goal during the planning stage is to Do It Right, the first time. Once I have a single rack up and running, I'll expand to three or four. Also, if anyone has recommendations for articles, books and "how-to" websites regarding such, I'd appreciate them as well. Thanks John |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Totally stoked dude ![]() | Re: Your advice on building a dream coral farm A plane ticket to Fiji would be my first purchase Actually, if you are talking about growing frags, good flow through style raceways, design something that makes effcient use of light, stable calcium reactor, monster skimmer.
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| | #4 (permalink) | |
| Tubeworm | Re: Your advice on building a dream coral farm Quote:
Although I have to wonder if the immense expenditure for a greenhouse and equipment actually yields better results than a traditional indoors setup. I mean, he spends a fortune building a greenhouse, then has to jump through all manner of hoops to block the amount of sunlight that actually reaches the corals. Plus, did I miss something or was the plan to place regular old glass tanks on top of his large vats all along? He spent a lot of energy and cash on the reverse carlson water motion equipment in the vats, then blocked his access to them by placing the tanks on top of them. Since he declared that he was done posting updates about the system once he added the display tanks up top, I'm wondering if he spent a small fortune building the most elaborate sump money can buy, effectively. None of that is meant in a derogatory way, it just seems like he spent $50,000 and 2 years time building what amounts to 500 gallons of usefull space. My goal is somewhat the reverse: compacting the maxiumum amount of propagation space in the smallest footprint possible with a reasonable hobbyists budget, say $5,000. Again, no disrespect is intended. I learned a lot from his experience but it's not what I have in mind. Any specific suggestions on a setup that doesn't entail a greenhouse, 2 years and spending my kids college money? ![]() | |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Totally stoked dude ![]() | Re: Your advice on building a dream coral farm I suggest small. Me and a guy in town researched setting up a coral farm, did about two months of research and buisness plan and everything. We came to the conclusion it would be very difficult to break even or make a profit sellingonly coral frags that we grew out. It is a great way however to offset the cost of running your main display. Espcially if you have a few specimens that aren't as common. Either Dave or JB or perhaps it was someone else on RC built what I though was an ingenoius frag growout tank. It was something along the lines of 4foot by 4 foot by 10inches high. Then it was baffled like a maze the water had to run along the maze. It created like 10 feet of length for the water to travel and made effcient use of water flow and was lit by a single 400 watt DE pendant. If I can come across the link I'll post it, unfortunately RC's search button never works, so it might take a while ![]()
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| | #6 (permalink) | ||
| Tubeworm | Re: Your advice on building a dream coral farm Quote:
But it's great that you did the math first; many people launch themselves into ventures without first realistically determining if the numbers will line up -- and even fewer resist the urge to just plow ahead anyway even if the venture looks marginal. Quote:
Okay, time for an acronym check. Who is RC and what's a DE light? DE to me is diatomaceous earth filter. Thanks for the response. John | ||
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| | #7 (permalink) | |
| Tubeworm | Re: Your advice on building a dream coral farm Quote:
What's the consensus? Is skimming necessary for soft corals, SPS and shrooms? I plan on using a deep sand bed with plenty o' critters. | |
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| | #8 (permalink) | |
| Cabbage Leather | Re: Your advice on building a dream coral farm Quote:
DE = Double Ended Light Here's a LIST of abbreviations that may help you out!
__________________ Doug | |
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| | #9 (permalink) |
| Totally stoked dude ![]() | Re: Your advice on building a dream coral farm IMO you want to grow your softies and mushrroms rics etc in a seperate system from your sps. IMO if you want to grow sps you want them ina LOW nutrient environment, meaning now DSB heavy skimming, high current and intense light. SPS grow very well in nutrient poor conditions. For your rics, softies etc, you don't need that heavy skimming and strong light. In fact in my experience mushrooms and rics grow larger and are easier to frag under low light, like normal output florescent bulbs. If you are looking to sell locally try to figure out what there is a demand for. That was one of the factors for us. We are into SPS corals and that is what we really wanted to grow, but the local demand for sps consists of about 15 people. Where as I can sell mushrooms and softies all week long in my store.
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| | #11 (permalink) | |||
| Tubeworm | Re: Your advice on building a dream coral farm Quote:
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Quote:
John | |||
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| | #12 (permalink) |
| Tubeworm | Re: Your advice on building a dream coral farm Here's the general design I have in mind. Although, I may tweak their design somewhat. I think I'd like to have several shallow (4") tanks without the rack tiers in each tank, with the cuttings all at the same depth so as to maximize the number of specimens in close proximity to the lights. The multiple tiers within the a single tank design seen in the link doesn't seem as efficient to me, although it would display better than having everything at the same depth as my design would. I'm thinking that I'd also have a few 6" and 8" tanks in another rack to move specimens to as they outgrow the 4" cutting tanks. Comments or suggestions? |
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| | #13 (permalink) |
| Fire Coral | Re: Your advice on building a dream coral farm Here is my frag system. It is 73x29.5x10H and currently lit by 2x250w radiums. I have a ampmaster 3600 closed loop pump on it and it is full of sps, some lps lots of zoo's and a couple rics. I connected it to my exhisting system which is on the opposite wall in my basement. So far I have spent about a grand on the venture not including corals and it hasn't paid back a penny It has only been about 3 weeks tho.![]()
__________________ Tom |
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| | #14 (permalink) |
| The Wand Geek was here. ;) ![]() | Re: Your advice on building a dream coral farm Nice frag tank BigT!
__________________ ~Doni Marie~ GOT ICH??? My Victorious Battle with ICH 120 Reef Chronicle ~ Breeding Picasso Clownfish~ Massive 300 gal growout~ My Anemone & Picasso Tank ~ Picasso & Snowcasso for sale~ "Energy and persistence conquer all things." Benjamin Franklin __________________________________________________ ______________________________________________ |
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| | #15 (permalink) | |
| Totally stoked dude ![]() | Re: Your advice on building a dream coral farm Quote:
Ricordia ![]() Sorry, meant to say NO deep Sand Bed with a powerful skimmer. Yep, first corals I kept were mushrooms under plain ole 40 watt daylight bulbs. They got HUGE.
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