Cali Kid Corals

how I started my reef tank **super cheap**

One day I want to get a coral tank suddenly, the idea just come to my mind. but I searched online, it costs a lot which make me sad.

I bought a second hand reef tank with sands. then I think about how to low the cost. In bay area, we can get sea water easily. I started from there. but when I put the sea water directly into the tank. the water turned into green and smelly, even can't see the sands. I think it's because of the sands. really messed up for this step. But i'm too lazy to dump the water, clean the sands .....

Oyster is the secret weapon. I searched online, there are some videos which introduce how oyster clean sea water efficiently. Got idea from there, I went to 99 ranch market and bought 3 live oysters, put in my "green" tank. It was really surprised me that the water was crystal clean next morning. Awesome oysters!!! they costed a bout 3 dollars. After about a week, I went to beach again, got some turbo snails and hermit crabs. Put them into the really clean tank to test if the water is good, they were pretty happy there.

About a week later I got GSP with a rock for 25 dollars. at that time, I don't know if it's good to put them in because I visited some corals stores, they told me that I need 1-2 months to setup the tank. That really frustrated me. I decided to put the rock and GSP in my tank based on two reasons: 1, everybody says GSP is hardy; 2, the water was cleaned by oysters and tested by snails and hermits, no chemicals was added. this is the video I just put them in.

The result was pretty good even though there are some problems that there are bristle worms and aiptasia hide on the rock. Today is the three months mark for my tank. here it is:

So far, I have not tested anything for the water. still using water directly from ocean. I believe it's very low cost way to setup and maintain a reef tank, so just share it here.

May 4 2021 update:
This afternoon I just noticed some tiny worms on the glass of my tank. Wondering what's that? never see them before. I have three berghia nudibranch in my tank, I'm guessing they are berghia babies? here is the footage. they are so tiny that I used a magnifier to make them a little bigger. let me know if you know what are they, thanks.

May 8 2021 update:
Yesterday I got three zoas frags to my tank.nuclear green palythoas, Scrambled eggs, and utter chaos. utter chaos came from @Srt4eric DBTC. So nice to have it. the other two I bought from a young guy for 10 dollars. I feel they are really cheap. at very first glance, I thought they were dead or dying. scrambled eggs closed so tight that looks very tiny. nuclear green was open like umbrella syndrome, and no response to touch. I was upset. but after I put them in in my tank, they just gradually opened, all of them opened. it was amazing. here are some pictures of them.
IMG_20210508_113137[1].jpg
IMG_20210508_113212[1].jpg
IMG_20210508_113232[1].jpg


05/29/2021 update:
I got a emerald crab from pet club. thanks @Srt4eric. it ate one small bubble algae last night. today I noticed it was picking something from zoas, not sure what's that. Hope it can eat all the bublbles.
 
Last edited:
It’s amazing you can keep the oyster alive in the tank. Oysters live in colder water . 78-80F in typical reef tank is too warm for them.
 
That is just amazing how you got it to work with the oyster and beach seawater. And when you get hungry you can eat those oysters. Cleaver!!!
I love how your tank is actually working.

Oh by the way, be careful picking up livestock from the beach. I believed is actually illegal in california without the proper license. Fish and games can give u a big ticket if caught, but again I could be wrong .
 
That is just amazing how you got it to work with the oyster and beach seawater. And when you get hungry you can eat those oysters. Cleaver!!!
I love how your tank is actually working.

Oh by the way, be careful picking up livestock from the beach. I believed is actually illegal in california without the proper license. Fish and games can give u a big ticket if caught, but again I could be wrong .
thanks! it was a concern though I have fish license. I'm not adding any livestock from beaches to my tank since it works well now.
 
Consider manila clams instead...

Oysters tend to be more brackish waters compatible... so their top line salinity is much lower than most reef tanks.
 
Consider manila clams instead...

Oysters tend to be more brackish waters compatible... so their top line salinity is much lower than most reef tanks.
thanks for your advice. right now I have another clam in my tank, which also came from 99 ranch market, called jumbo clam maybe.
 
One day I want to get a coral tank suddenly, the idea just come to my mind. but I searched online, it costs a lot which make me sad.

I bought a second hand reef tank with sands. then I think about how to low the cost. In bay area, we can get sea water easily. I started from there. but when I put the sea water directly into the tank. the water turned into green and smelly, even can't see the sands. I think it's because of the sands. really messed up for this step. But i'm too lazy to dump the water, clean the sands .....

Oyster is the secret weapon. I searched online, there are some videos which introduce how oyster clean sea water efficiently. Got idea from there, I went to 99 ranch market and bought 3 live oysters, put in my "green" tank. It was really surprised me that the water was crystal clean next morning. Awesome oysters!!! they costed a bout 3 dollars. After about a week, I went to beach again, got some turbo snails and hermit crabs. Put them into the really clean tank to test if the water is good, they were pretty happy there.

About a week later I got GSP with a rock for 25 dollars. at that time, I don't know if it's good to put them in because I visited some corals stores, they told me that I need 1-2 months to setup the tank. That really frustrated me. I decided to put the rock and GSP in my tank based on two reasons: 1, everybody says GSP is hardy; 2, the water was cleaned by oysters and tested by snails and hermits, no chemicals was added. this is the video I just put them in.

The result was pretty good even though there are some problems that there are bristle worms and aiptasia hide on the rock. Today is the three months mark for my tank. here it is:

So far, I have not tested anything for the water. still using water directly from ocean. I believe it's very low cost way to setup and maintain a reef tank, so just share it here.
if you wanna test out a kenya tree coral i got some too :D those things dont die easily for me.
 
Wow, nice start. Quite different than how most do it.
The water from the beach is considered dirty by many.
Also the rock and sand aren't tought to be safe either.
The livestock you picked up are coldwater species, that's neat that they can survive in warm water too.
 
Wow, nice start. Quite different than how most do it.
The water from the beach is considered dirty by many.
Also the rock and sand aren't tought to be safe either.
The livestock you picked up are coldwater species, that's neat that they can survive in warm water too.
thanks.
yes, a lot videos said that water from beach was polluted. I got mine from half moon bay jetty where is pretty close to the harbor, but it works fine.
the little rocks was fine to put in. the big rock with livestock is not a good idea.
for the livestock, honestly, all hermit crabs died though they live in there for about 2 months. two oysters died, three or four mussels died. sorry for them, but they were good indicator.
the only thing stays alive all the time is turbo snails, not only live well, also reproduce babies snails.
don't put geoduck clam in there, they will die soon and pollute the water.
 
This afternoon I just noticed some tiny worms on the glass of my tank. Wondering what's that? never see them before. I have three berghia nudibranch in my tank, I'm guessing they are berghia babies? here is the footage. they are so tiny that I used a magnifier to make them a little bigger. let me know if you know what are they, thanks.
 
Back
Top