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Just stock slowly and patiently. Personally, I have not used dry rock, but in the future I think I would. But only about 50% dry, the rest quality live rock. Good luck. |
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If was doing a drop off I would strongly consider using dry rock so that you can place and glue everything at your pace. Then as suggested seed it with good quality live rock for a few months and then you should be pest free and good to go :biggrin:
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"catch up"....... maybe we can sweet talk Mindy into doing a "dead rock" article and make it a "sticky"? |
^totally agree with what Brad and Doug are saying.... same problem here in Edmonton....
Steve |
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Dry rock is a viable alternative, IF you have the patience. I know patience is not something I personally have much of....:) |
I know forsure that a cycled tank and curing rock is different. I think I had a thread on here that was titled cycled rock vs cured rock and myka gives a good talk. I think I'm convinced with such a small price difference in used and rock from the lfs I'm going to use quality rock. I think an article like that would be great because at one point I was searching for that topic. Would 20 lbs of live and say 10 lbs of dry pack my 20g to full? I won't have a sump untill I build my own stand.
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I think your 20 lbs of live would be sufficient, one lb per gallon is the rule I go by and it hasnt failed me yet...
Steve |
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Oh yes I understand that but to create a cliff, easier with base rock. But I want to have enough live rock. |
in that case follow the 20 lbs of live rock and use however much base as needed for your project!
Steve |
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