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Cycling dry rock

customclimates

Non-member
I am looking for some select pieces of dry rock; preferably the cherry picked Marco Rock for my upgrade in a few months. If you do not have a spare skimmer or light what is the best way to cure it from now to then? In a new tank this was easy to sit & wait it out. Not quite sure how to go about it at this point.
 
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I cured mine for about 6 months in a garbage can with no light, a couple powerheads and a backpack skimmer. After the main funk was gone, about 1-2 months, I started putting about 1tbs of fish goo in a week. After 4 months the rock was able to completely cycle all the food I was putting in. Nitrates were at zero. It's the only rock I put in the 92, nothing from my previous tank. The tanks been up for 3 months or so and from day 1 the nitrates have been zero, and that's with a fairly high bioload built up pretty fast.
 
What if you do not have the skimmer? This may be a very simple & a real newbie question but instead of reading first on the net I figured I would go direct and just put it out there.
 
You can just do water changes.. i did mine in a 30gal barrel 1 power head, no light no skimmer and did a 2 gal water change per week for 2 months.. i did start it off using water from my main tank..
 
I think the thing to remember is that you aren't trying to save any life on the rock--there is none. When you cure live rock with a skimmer and light the goal is to let stuff thats going to die, die, and do you best to maintain a healthy environment for the stuff thats going to live. We did just fine with curing Marco rock in a big tub with buffered "used tank water," a heater, and a bunch of power heads. Periodically, I changed most of the water and at that time I swished the rocks really hard in a separate container to remove any soft stuff. Once the water quality was good in the tub, I changed the water once more, and dropped in a couple pieces of established rock, and a few clumps of cheatomorpra with hopes of establishing a pod population in the absence of fish.
 
dropped in a couple pieces of established rock, and a few clumps of cheatomorpra with hopes of establishing a pod population in the absence of fish.

I put a small piece of live rock in the garbage can on day one and the pods survived and multiplied. Pods were a large part of why I put food in. It was definitely nice to put the brand new rock in the tank and see some very large pods roaming around.
 
Like Shawn said, it can be done with water changes in lieu of a skimmer. I also used water from a water change on the display to get it started. I added some sand and took some pods from the display a few times to get that rolling as well...
 
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