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#1
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![]() How many people have moved houses/apartments, and taken their reef tank(s) with them? Would you do it again? Or would you consider tearing it all down, and starting from scratch once you're moved?
I'm kind of not sure what I think is the "less unfavorable" option? ![]() ![]()
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-- Tony My next hobby will be flooding my basement while repeatedly banging my head against a brick wall and tearing up $100 bills. Whee! |
#2
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![]() I have moved many many tanks for customers, its not very fun, I dont like it, but I do it if they want to pay, it helps if you have extra tanks setup to hold livestock but I have done it without many times too. I say go for it, its very doable, just not fun. How not fun? I charge $1000-$1500 to move a fully stocked 150-230gallon. Good pay for one days work, but what a pain in the ass, re-plumbing fitting, dirty equipment, heavy loads...
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#3
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![]() You are only moving across the city Tony...I think it depends on what you really want to keep. I have lots of air pumps and pails heheh...
![]() You just have to do some planning at both ends...likely not much different than a ...longer....tank change over.. ![]() |
#4
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![]() Well Tony ... this is a subject that I have given much thought if we were to find a larger home in our neighbourhood ... as you know it would be no small feat to move my tank/sump/refugium but I figure if I had a couple days it would be doable ... a few large rubbermaid stock tanks or kiddie pools ( one for fish / one for rock / one for corals ) ... first thing would be to move all of the livestock to new house ( beg borrow or steal extra lighting/heaters/skimmers etc for the few days needed ) ... then to move tank/sump/refugium/reactor/skimmer/lighting
If I were to move I would have prebuilt a larger tank to be assembled in the new house ( new dimensions would be 96W X 60D X 30H ) so would need a bit more time compared to a ready to fill tank Planning I think would be the key to success and of course a little help from your friends ![]()
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Steve “The most important decision you make is to be in a good mood.” ― Voltaire |
#5
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![]() i moved my reef setup (plus several freshwater tanks) across town last winter and probably spent more time planning the move than actually moving
it was pretty successful losing only a coral banded shrimp (coincidently when i moved the reef within the same building, the only loss i suffered was my first cbs ![]() i had lots of fresh saltwater on hand and bought a 50 gallon rubbermaid tub as a temporary tank (heater, skimmer etc - 2 days with only NO lights but i figured it was a necessary stress if i had to do it again i would but not in winter if i had a choice there was a lot of stress since it took the reef a good month to settle and return to its former glory |
#6
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![]() I think that the biggest obstacle is time.
Time to let the new water to cycle. Time to let the glue for the plumbing fittings cure.(as long as you already have the plumbing layout and all the fittings right there with you and don't have to make a million trips to the fitting store ![]() When I moved my 204g last year, I also had that empty 180g, which I moved first. I did have time on my side, but I can't imagine moving without having a spare tank, and a 1 month overlap. You could transport the old water, but like UnderWorld says, what a hassle. Your precious fish get stressed, your corals react, you have heat issues, water movement and quality issues.... oh yeah...then you need to move your furniture too. ![]() Mitch |
#7
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![]() Tony: Keep the 72 bow (duh, right), but take the opportunity to replace/upgrade that scratched 75 finally. I think with the moving of the species tank, you'll be plenty stressed enough. Decide what you really want to keep from the 75, and go from there. You can even get people to coral-sit for a while if needed. (I think Jon might have some room left.
![]() Like Deb says, it can be a full or partial rebuilding - either way, a great chance to get the setup you want. New home, new tank - isn't that that the rule?? ![]()
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---------------------- Alan |
#8
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![]() If i had to do it again......id have sold it all and started over.
In retrospect i toyed with the idea for a good while before i moved, and decided i did not want to pay for it all again,so id move them. That was mistake #1.....i lost 90 % of my SPS including a few that were atleast soccerball sized....these are not so easy to just maintain in pails...mostly because they didnt even fit in most of them. ![]() So now i get to start over anyways. My Major mistake was the fact that i didnt really plan it out, but in the midst of purchasing a home and moving in within a couple weeks, renting trucks and all the other junk involved it just doesnt leave a whole lot of time to plan. But in reality my reef stuff had to be placed on the backburner...you probably have a whole house worth of other stuff to move too right ? I also considered setting up my new system before the actuall move and just transfer corals...that would be the best and the least amount of losses, but for me it wasnt an option..i found my wallet and accounts were getting sucked dry from down payments, property taxes and such. I had my prized piece placed in a friends tank when the others started going...and im so happy i did...and thanks Jamie!. If you have friends nearby, and they have a little room, i would take your favorite peices to them, sell the remaining, and move your reef stuff along with everything else...it will save you a jar of ibuprofin and alot of sleep. owell...it begins anew ! ![]() Good luck with yours Tony.
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Confucious say : Things that come to those who wait, will be things left over by those who didnt. |
#9
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![]() THe last time I moved, I had 2 days. For the first time I actually hired movers, so that left me mostly free to deal with the tank. The move went smoothly and I didn't lose anything. In fact, I tried to lose a tomato clown, and somehow the little **** made it back into the tank.
As for the movers, it cost me about the same as renting a truck, paying gas and insurance, beer and pizza, etc. Took the guys 5 hours total. I'll never move my own stuff again! Well, 'cept the tank ![]()
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Brad |
#10
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![]() I got lots of room in my sump for livestock and corals Tony
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No matter what the morrow brings, inventors keep inventing things. ----------------------------------- Jonathan ----------------------------------- www.cakerybakery.ca |
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