Substrate?

blukat40

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I am just days aways from starting my first reef tank and I was planning on using sand as my substrate but after talking to a guy at my LFS, he did not think that was a good idea. His reasoning was that it was impossible to vacuum.
My question: is that truly a concern in a reef tank? I thought that is what clean up crews etc were for. I am not opposed to aragonite or others, I just like the way sand looks.
 
The flow you are likely to end up with in a (successful) reef tank can cause sand to be a headache.

The prevailing opinion seems to be that the ideal size (not so small as to blow around; not so large as to trap lots of detritus) is CaribSea Reeflor Special Grade.
 
mine blows all over my tank.. but it doesn't bother me.. I just rake it smooth from time to time.. (at least once every 2 weeks)
 
If you like the way it looks go ahead and get what .45 reccommends. Barebottom just looks, well so bare.
 
cr500_af;627485 wrote: the flow you are likely to end up with in a (successful) reef tank can cause sand to be a headache.

The prevailing opinion seems to be that the ideal size (not so small as to blow around; not so large as to trap lots of detritus) is caribsea reeflor special grade.

+1
 
Thanks for the feedback. I went with Caraibsea Florida Crushed Coral. Looks pretty good.
 
+20 on special, my fiji pink looks like a bunch of mini-mexican jumping beans. Almost everyday is like a new tank though....:confused2:
 
Like all things in this hobby, this choice is part opinion/part science...

My advice would be too go with something that:

#1 - you like how it looks (color, etc.)
#2 - is as close to natural for your system as possible (if you have blennies or sand sifters make sure you have sand...)
#3 - good rule of thumb is approximately 2.0mm to 4.0mm grain size (keeps it from blowing too bad but allows for some movement, does not "pack")

That's my two cents!
 
CC is gone. Sand is in...
It wasn't much of hassle to switch as the tank was only a day in. As a result the reef looks a lot better now and with more stability than before.
Lesson learned.
Now I am just going to look at for a few weeks and let it cycle.
 
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