jc74
Member
When I got into this hobby I heard how high-maintenance it was. Constant water changes. Water tests. Sumps. Specialized foods. I basically got the idea that you had to keep up with this daily as if it was so delicate that if you sneezed on the tank, it would die.
I've had marine fish for the past 15 years, being extremely careful during most of it. But during the last 5 years at least, I sort of lost interest and just let things go.
And, what I've noticed is that when I leave things alone, things thrive. When I was constantly changing the water and doing this and that, I had a lot of deaths and changes in the tank. When I let it go, to just be a natural ecosystem, everything has remained alive and healthy. I've had the same percula clowns for at least 6 years and they're HUGE, fat, bright and healthy. My turbo snails are also giants with sea fans and algea growing on their shells. It's just like the ocean.
In light of this, I definitely think too much maintenance in a tank harmful. Just let it go. I talked to a former local marine fish monger about his a few years ago, and he said the same thing. He just let it go and everything thrived. As long as you have proper water flow and lots of rock to house beneficial bacteria, you basically have a mini-ocean. There's no need to constantly change it in order to assure its health.
I've had marine fish for the past 15 years, being extremely careful during most of it. But during the last 5 years at least, I sort of lost interest and just let things go.
And, what I've noticed is that when I leave things alone, things thrive. When I was constantly changing the water and doing this and that, I had a lot of deaths and changes in the tank. When I let it go, to just be a natural ecosystem, everything has remained alive and healthy. I've had the same percula clowns for at least 6 years and they're HUGE, fat, bright and healthy. My turbo snails are also giants with sea fans and algea growing on their shells. It's just like the ocean.
In light of this, I definitely think too much maintenance in a tank harmful. Just let it go. I talked to a former local marine fish monger about his a few years ago, and he said the same thing. He just let it go and everything thrived. As long as you have proper water flow and lots of rock to house beneficial bacteria, you basically have a mini-ocean. There's no need to constantly change it in order to assure its health.