The Analog Tracker

Clarity and consistency for your reef tank.

A dedicated physical ledger to track water parameters, establish dosing routines, and maintain the discipline required for a thriving aquarium.

Processed securely by Amazon. Prime shipping available.

* Printed on standard 55# paper via Amazon KDP.
Designed for your desk, not the splash zone.

Tidewater Logbook on a dark wooden desk

What you can track

Structured layouts designed specifically for saltwater and reef systems.

Water Parameters

Dedicated grids for Alkalinity, Calcium, Magnesium, Salinity, Nitrates, and Phosphates. Spot the subtle shifts before they crash your tank.

Maintenance Schedule

Log water changes, filter sock replacements, skimmer cleanings, and equipment checks to build a reliable, fail-proof routine.

Dosing & Quarantine

Keep a strict historical record of daily dosing volumes, new livestock observation periods, and specific medication treatments.

Why analog still works

While apps are powerful, a physical ledger sitting next to your test kits serves as a tangible reminder of your commitment to the tank. It offers immediate accountability with zero friction.

No charging, no subscriptions, and no navigating touchscreens with wet hands. Just raw, reliable data.

A Look Inside

Clean, no-nonsense layouts maximizing writing space.

Parameter Grid Preview - Tidewater Reef Tank Tracking Logbook
Maintenance Log Preview - Aquarium Filter and Water Change Tracker
Quarantine Tracker Preview - Saltwater Fish Quarantine Log

Who is this for?

  • Hobbyists who value the quiet ritual of manual testing.
  • Aquarists transitioning from a "guessing" phase to a disciplined routine.
  • Reefers tired of managing multiple app subscriptions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the logbook waterproof?

No. This is a traditional paperback book printed on standard 55# paper via Amazon. It is meant to be kept dry on your desk or aquarium stand, not in the splash zone.

How long will one book last?

Depending on your testing frequency, the ~120 pages provide enough tracking grids for approximately a full year of weekly testing.

Start your tracking routine.

Designed for serious reefers. Available through Amazon with standard and Prime shipping options.

Free printable parameter tracker sheet PDF preview Free Download

Try it on paper first. Free.

Download a high-resolution, printable PDF page of our parameter tracking sheet. Test it next to your sump. Keep your expensive phone safe.

We respect your privacy. No spam, just reefing tips.

Reef Tank Parameter Stability FAQ

Why is tracking Alkalinity (dKH) fluctuations critical for SPS and LPS corals?

Alkalinity is the buffer capacity of your saltwater aquarium. Quick drops or spikes in Alkalinity (dKH) are the number one cause of coral tissue necrosis (STN/RTN). Consistent weekly tracking helps you adjust your calcium reactor or dosing pumps before swings occur.

Why are my corals struggling even though my parameters look "perfect"?

A common frustration in reefkeeping is having corals fail while tests report nominal numbers. Corals care more about **chemical stability** than hitting a specific "ideal" digit. A sudden swing in salinity or dKH over 24 hours does far more damage than running a tank at a slightly lower but completely stable parameter for months. Recording weekly trends in an analog ledger reveals these hidden swings.

How often should I test calcium, alkalinity, and magnesium?

For established tanks, checking Alkalinity twice a week and Calcium/Magnesium once a week is highly recommended. If you are adjusting dosing schedules or introducing new SPS corals, testing every 48 hours is necessary until parameters stabilize.

What is the correlation between pH and Alkalinity in a saltwater tank?

Alkalinity acts as the buffer that keeps pH stable. While pH measures hydrogen ion concentration, Alkalinity represents the water's ability to neutralize acids. High carbon dioxide (CO2) in home air often forces pH down even if Alkalinity is at a healthy 9.0 dKH. Logging both metrics daily or weekly helps diagnose gas exchange problems or the need for a CO2 scrubber.

Do I need to log parameters manually if I use automated monitors (Apex, GHL)?

Yes. Electronic probes are highly susceptible to biofouling, drift, and calibration loss. Professional reefers always cross-check automation with manual reagents weekly. Having a physical paper logbook on your bench provides an immediate "analog override record" that protects your tank from automated dosing malfunctions.

How does an analog parameter logbook compare to digital aquarium spreadsheets?

While digital spreadsheets (like Excel or Google Sheets) are great for long-term data analysis, they are highly impractical during testing. Wet, salty hands are highly corrosive to touchscreens. An analog logbook sits safely on your test bench, serving as a physical prompt to maintain your testing routine.

Is this logbook compatible with Hanna Checkers and Red Sea test kits?

Yes. The columns are pre-formatted for all standard marine aquarium test kits (Salinity, pH, Alkalinity, Calcium, Magnesium, Nitrate, and Phosphate). The blank rows let you customize the grid for secondary measurements like Potassium, Iodine, or ICP test dates.