I don't want to know everything

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Paul B

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I posted this thread 3 years ago and just found it. I wanted to re-post it because I thought it would be interesting and stir up some conversation:



I don't know everything and I don't want to. For me it is the challenge of the unknown that excites me and the more knowledge I get, the less challenge there is. If we knew how to definately cure ich with say a pill or eliminate hair algae in an hour how boreing would this hobby be.
The same thing happened just before fish keeping began in the 1800s. Women in England would collect ferns. And eventually their fern collections grew to include all of the ferns in Europe and there was nothing left to collect. They had all the knowledge there was to know about ferns, how to keep them, how to identify them etc. There was drawings of all the various varieties and their hobby stagnated as the thrill was gone. Then they started walking around in the shallow tide pools and started to collect marine sea creatures. That is how this hobby started.
But when we know how to cure everything, keep everything and raise everything there will not be any reason to get excited if your bangai cardinal spawns because it will be a normal, almost daily occurance.
When they build powerheads, lights, and skimmers to last forever it will be very boring, for me anyway as I love to experiment with new things.
I am sure that any time now there will be no need to dose as they will most likely make ASW with time release nutrients as they do with pills. Nitrates will most likely be eliminmated with some device like a catylic converter that removes pollutants from car exhausts.
So I think that if we feel we have a problem with something in our tank, we should view that is an exciting, learning experience and not a harbinger of doom as most people view it.
I personally like it when something goes wrong and I can find a way to fix it and discover ways to stop it from happening. I don't just want to view my perfect tank forever just the way it is with no changes and all the same creatures living forever. In my living room there is an 8' painting of an undersea scene. I may as well just stare at that.

People ask me all the time why I don't raise the fish that spawn in my tank. The answer is simple, I already raised a number of them so the thrill is almost gone. The first fish I raised were some blue devils. After the eggs were laid I would sit up all night with a flashlight waiting for the eggs to hatch. Then I would try to count them and feel really sad when I would lose some. I nursed them to adulthood and waited for them to spawn. It was a big thrill and an exciting time in the hobby for me, especially because that was way before the internet was invented so the few people I told about it were amazed. Now of course thousands of fish have been spawned and raised and written about so if it happens in your tank, very few people would even care. The more we do in this hobby or life in general, the less excited we get. It's just life. I still very much love this hobby but now my "goal" has changed. I no longer buy a fish to see how long I can keep it because I know how long (if at all) I can keep most fish. I know which corals I can and can't keep and the ones I want to keep. Many people in this hobby feel the pinnacle of success is a tank full of SPS. I also did, but now my interests have changed. I now go for oddities, unusual creatures we rarely see.

How do you feel about al this?
 
Paul...I will just add this to echo the gist of your comments. The day I stop learning something about this hobby (aka addiction) is the day I get out.
 
I don't want to know everything either, my brain would explode... ewwwwwww
 
That's right. This hobby is so complex that it will keep us thinking forever. Which is a good thing
 
That Sir is the most important aspect. :p:p:p
 
It keeps us thinking thats for sure but I believe there is very little that you personally don't know about this hobby. You always have the simple DIY type attitude with everything in the hobby, and I personally enjoy reading articles and about your tank.
 
Considering I'm new to the hobby I couldn't agree more. Everyday I wake up to see what's going on in the tank. I text my wife from work to see what's going on, and if anything has changed. When something changes I scramble to search here and the Internet to see if I can figure it out. At the same time it's easy to get overwhelmed reading so many post about things and building new tanks. I love this hobby (addiction).
 
It keeps us thinking thats for sure but I believe there is very little that you personally don't know about this hobby. You always have the simple DIY type attitude with everything in the hobby, and I personally enjoy reading articles and about your tank.

Thank you but that is totally wrong. I have learned a lot because I am old, but the more you know, the more you realize you don't know. Sometimes a coral dies in my tank for no apparent reason and it drives me nuts. Why would one thing die that has been in your tank for years when a bunch of similar corals are thriving. Do they get bored or lonely? I have no idea. I don't go for the simple answer like what are your parameters or change some water. Those answers are a cop out and they only mean we don't know the answer. If all your corals die, that is different. That probably just means you had Rap music on near the tank. :eek:
I have made all the problems that could be made and I am sure I made up some myself. I find this hobby fascinating especially when something goes wrong. If nothing ever went wrong, we may as well collect Millie Vanillie CDs. :rolleyes: If you never heard of them, Google them.
 
I think it's fantastic when someone gets the most joy out of the process of doing something, whether it's keeping a reef tank, working on a car, or baking a cake. However, I find I'm just not like that. I enjoy the end result of things far more than I enjoy the process. I don't know if that's a character flaw or not, but it's who I am.

I enjoy a fully stocked, well functioning aquarium; I don't particularly enjoy the building process, the way a tank looks in its early days, when problems arise, and so on. I'd probably buy everything already set up and grown in if that were an affordable option, but it's not for me, so I put in the time to create it myself. I don't altogether dislike the process, but I wouldn't do it if I didn't expect the end result to be a beautiful reef tank.

I really admire and enjoy reading posts from process lovers like Paul B, but I recognize I'm not the same.
 
Yes we are different. I do like the process. Now I have been taking a photography course and obviousely didn't finish yet but I have been fooling around with the camera.

 
Yes, I know, old thread but I just re-found it so shoot me what can I tell you! :rolleyes:

I noticed that picture I posted above and looking at my tank now I see that it is different. Some of those larger montipora bleached and died while others, right near those grew larger. I see no reason for this but I find it fascinating that this would happen in the same tank. That bubble coral is also not in there any longer and it lived for many years. What happened? I have no idea. Why would a coral live for many years seemingly "happy" then gradually shrink and die. Did it starve? If it did, why did it take so long? Did it have enough light? It's the same light now that has been in there. Probably my nitrate reading over 100. Some of those gorgonians are now sponges as that encrusting gorg in the center sometimes gets to touch them and grows all over then, suffocating them and covering them. They actually look kind of cool now as they have the same shape as the original coral, but now sway in the current as a sponge.
How cool is that? Thats why I love this hobby so much, it constantly changes. That striped wrasse on the right side jumped out which allowed me to get another fish. That orange sponge started to grow algae so I put it in a cave where it seems kind of content although now such a nice color.
Those two yellow wrasses also jumped out but that is all part of the fun, not so much for them. :cool:
 
My tank is currently SPS dominant because I'd never done it over the years for fear of killing everything off. I had the opportunity to grab frags from locals so if I did kill them, it wasnt a colony that I was destroying. I did lose one of the 14 frags I picked up but have been enjoying the ride. At some point down the road, I'd love to grab a much larger island tank with a symmetrical rock structure; one side would be SPS and the other would be LPS so you always had something cool to look at with a bit less maintenance over a mixed, single sided display (a Yin and Yang type of aquascape).

I dont do enough research/read fast enough or frequently enough to ever stop learning something in this hobby before I die.
 
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IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

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  • No.

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