It starts with a plan...and goes somewhere...right?

Scott Fellman

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I'm big on planning of new aquariums.

Like, I think through all of the tiny details. I'm the kind of guy who will spend an entire day just looking into what color and type of background material I intend to use for the tank. Plumbing parts? Oh, I can literally lose myself in a hardware store. Rock? What kind? Dry, "cultured", manmade...urghh...Driftwood? Yikes. And don't even get me started on substrates! Not only do you have different materials, but you've got a choice of grades, colors, "live", and dry- it's enough to make a fish geek's head explode!

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The kinds of tanks I'd whip up the night before MACNA. Seriously. Weird FW stuff.

Yeah.

Below is literally my mindset on the whole process. It sounds great on paper, and there is a certain simple logic to it. But it's also where things seemed to go terribly wrong for me:

I mean, every tank should start with some sort of plan, idea, or concept. You need to know what kind of fish you're intending to keep pretty early on in the game...like, literally, at the very beginning. The stocking plan is pretty much mission-critical, I'd say. And then, you should decide what kind of environment you're going to keep the cool fishes that you decided upon in. And then you need to figure out what equipment you need to achieve this. And of course, then comes the "fun" part- the aquascape. I mean, all the planning in the world is kind of a wasted exercise if the tank looks like----.

Well you know what I mean.

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Ahhrhhh...it's starting again...!

By my estimation, and using this process, the planning of a tank takes like roughly "3 days per gallon." So, a great 50 gallon tank should take...150 days. 5 FREAKING MONTHS? JUST TO PLAN?

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I am nuts. Well, I should say- I was nuts for a while.

I wasn't always a human glacier, however.

When I was a kid, I would be re-configuring my 10 gallon community tank like monthly. In January, I'd have a Tetra community tank. February would be time for Kribs. March would be Mollies in a brackish tank. By April, it was back to fresh in time to mess around with a group of killifish. Well, May was one of those months where my thoughts tuned to..Barbs...and...well, you get the picture.


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I was fast. Really fast. I think part of it was because I was an impatient kid with limited resources and a desire to try tons of different things. Absurdly diverse interests. How else can you explain a 14 year old with memberships in the IBC, AKA, ACA, and ALA? I mean, I had one tank, and ultimately, a couple of tanks, dozens of plastic boxes, and two very understanding, but oft-times frustrated parents!

So that's how the concept of a "fish room" got started!

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Yet, there was a big chunk of my aquatic life that had me fall victim to my own obsessive planning thing. I mean, it was like "analysis paralysis." Fortunately, my hobby friends viewed my slow progressions from concept to completion as "disciplined", but the reality was that, inside, I knew I was somehow just spending way too much time and placing way too much emphasis on the planning part of the hobby equation. I did enjoy it a little, even if it seemed, well- slow.

Flash forward to today, and I have...3 aquariums in my 4 bedroom home, each in varying stages of the planning/building/growing process. Each one radically different from the other. Financially, I'm probably just slightly better than I was as a 14 year old (I mean, I'm in the aquatics industry, right?), and I still have absurdly diverse interests. Not much has changed, right?

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The difference? I'm actually working on each one regularly, putting them together on a very accelerated pace. I decided on concepts, system design, sourced everything, BOUGHT all of the stuff, and started assembly on two of my tanks within a month. Progression has been pretty rapid. Okay, sure, there are hobbyists out there who've put together entire fish rooms and had multiple spawns of Plecos in that kind of time frame, but this is progress. I mean, for me, that's practically breakneck speed!

Has a lot changed?

Actually, it really has. When you get to live a certain amount of life, you realize that your time on this planet is- well- finite- and if you want to accomplish stuff, you need to do it in less than a geological or stellar evolutionary time scale. You need to be decisive, to mark and move. "To fish or cut bait"...whatever. You need to DO something instead of PLAN to do something. You know, all of those cliches.

But they're actually pretty correct. And useful to apply.

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So, the impatient kid in me is back! I've learned to approach aquarium keeping like I've learned to approach my business: Methodically, yet "organically." Not to overthink stuff, yet to use a good approach that's coaxed along and evolved relatively quickly. Iterate and reiterate rapidly, yet within the context of the larger time frame. Realizing that the processes which you use to get things moving should be executed quickly, even if the journey to the ultimate goal is a longer, slower one. Because sitting with a pen and paper staring at the ceiling doesn't get anything done, be it in business or building a 50 gallon biotope reef aquarium.

Wow, I've finally married action and theory in a way that works! And enjoyment in my hobby is back and bigger than ever.

Yes, I still have a ridiculously tight aesthetic concept of how a tank should look, and how the overall aquarium should fit into my world, blah, blah, blah. Yeah, I still don't' like dangling wires, noise, and blatantly obvious gear on display. But I am also coming to grips with the reality that, even if you have a few electrical cords showing, or a maybe a plumbing return or three in the tank, that I'll somehow live. I mean, I'm just dealing with my absurdities now, instead of losing myself in them! I've learned to compromise a few anal retentive attitudes for the sake of the greater good here!

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Moving forward quickly never felt so good.

It's exciting times for me. A hobby renaissance. A time to do instead to plan. And most important- a time to enjoy. To enjoy the whole essence of this crazy cool hobby that we're all obsessed about.

So the takeaway hear, fellow fish geeks, is to learn from my hard-earned hobby knowledge gained over many tortuous decades, and not to let your ideas get in the way of your execution!

Stay driven. Stay focused on your goal, but open your eyes and increase your flexibility. Be nimble, agile, and open-minded. Stay on task.

And stay wet.

Scott Fellman


 
What a great first post! I sit 3 feet from my tank 8 hours a day and it makes me obsess about the little things. I tend to go really slowly with things now, but in previous tanks it was all knee-jerk. This tank has been much more pleasurable for me now that I've given myself a focus and stayed with it. Love your tanks by the way!
 
What a great first post! I sit 3 feet from my tank 8 hours a day and it makes me obsess about the little things. I tend to go really slowly with things now, but in previous tanks it was all knee-jerk. This tank has been much more pleasurable for me now that I've given myself a focus and stayed with it. Love your tanks by the way!

Thanks for the kind words. I should point out that they're not all my tanks. The ability to focus and plan IS important, but I've come to realize that just DOING is every bit as important as thinking through everything. That being said, essential planning to me is actually a fun part of the process...Imagineering as they call it at Disney, makes some sense- you can mentally "build" tanks and run through all sorts of stuff without dropping a dime.Of course, at some point, 'ya gotta pull the trigger- which I'm starting to get better about! I think I spent the last several years being more "clinical" than "practical", and it feels better than ever to get those hands wet again.
 
Nice advice Scott!
 
I started in freshwater...but though I researched aquarium-keeping as my Daddy taught me (fanatically, for months), all I really planned out was pool filter sand for the substrate (it's super-cheap, and either silica or quartz-based will work fine. Great for novices on a painfully tight budget), and that I did not want fake decor. Fake rubs me the wrong way. Anyhow...I bought a used 29g and scrubbed it out, leak-tested, cleaned and added my substrate, chose some wood that looked cool, and the rest just kind of evolved as I went. I kept the major rules in mind, such as fishless-cycling my tank, and the size-of-mouth rule, and made sure any fish I decided to buy was compatible with my setup and other fish, but the rest I didn't sweat. It felt amazing. Letting things just slowly come together, and occasionally be changed...science provides the framework, but the rest is reworkable art. I do miss my freshies. Which reminds me...don't get danios...manic little terrors they are, with a tendency to attack each other. Even in the 50g I ended up with next, the school made me so crazy I finally surrendered them to the LFS.

 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

  • Yes!

    Votes: 32 45.7%
  • Not yet, but I have one that I want to buy in mind!

    Votes: 9 12.9%
  • No.

    Votes: 26 37.1%
  • Other (please explain).

    Votes: 3 4.3%
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