Kensington Reefer
Supporting Member
Yes pleaseNo idea - from @Holly94583 If you would like some it would be good to have it in more than one tank in case something happens to ours. Side view:
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No rush
Thank you in advance
Yes pleaseNo idea - from @Holly94583 If you would like some it would be good to have it in more than one tank in case something happens to ours. Side view:
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Purple Whips? Beautiful show piece! Hope to add into my tank someday!No idea - from @Holly94583 If you would like some it would be good to have it in more than one tank in case something happens to ours. Side view:
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I read before the best way to frag is cut a branch, drill a little hole into rock, strip a bit of flesh like stripping copper wire, then glue the skeleton bit into the hole. Yours is huge though! Adds a very natural look to the tank. When I snorkeled in the keys earlier this year, the gorgonians were everywhere among the corals and lots of fish used them as hiding spots.No idea - from @Holly94583 If you would like some it would be good to have it in more than one tank in case something happens to ours. Side view:
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Check out posts #174-175,178 above! Ooooh - I would love to see them in the wild!I read before the best way to frag is cut a branch, drill a little hole into rock, strip a bit of flesh like stripping copper wire, then glue the skeleton bit into the hole. Yours is huge though! Adds a very natural look to the tank. When I snorkeled in the keys earlier this year, the gorgonians were everywhere among the corals and lots of fish used them as hiding spots.
Oh duh hahaha, I haven't gone far enough back in this thread!Check out posts #174-175,178 above! Ooooh - I would love to see them in the wild!
I always appreciate tips like yours, so thank you for the info!Oh duh hahaha, I haven't gone far enough back in this thread!
Favia looked fine on Friday. So that orange Lobo (?) stung it, I guess. Previous post shows how close it was. We moved it to the side as pictured here. Not sure anything would eat Favia. That Lobo was a tiny orange and green frag in 2016 and it has lived through some tank ordeals. I wonder what it would look like if I gave it more space. Need to rearrange. Hope Favia recovers. Students love it and I think every one has poked it gently with a long tool bc they all think it looks soft and wavy. A couple thought it was a special octopus.
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This is a newbie question but which is the favia? The purple one with green spots?Favia looked fine on Friday. So that orange Lobo (?) stung it, I guess. Previous post shows how close it was. We moved it to the side as pictured here. Not sure anything would eat Favia. That Lobo was a tiny orange and green frag in 2016 and it has lived through some tank ordeals. I wonder what it would look like if I gave it more space. Need to rearrange. Hope Favia recovers. Students love it and I think every one has poked it gently with a long tool bc they all think it looks soft and wavy. A couple thought it was a special octopus.
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This is a newbie question but which is the favia? The purple one with green spots?
I have the same one in my tank, but it’s been in there since the tank transfer and has finally started growing for the first time - i just don’t remember what it is!
Welcome back to your journalToday was a huge day for me. I feel that classroom tanks are on the mend and felt a positive attitude that has gone missing for a long time - as indicated by my lack of tank journal updates and club participation. Tanks and teaching have been very rough since Covid closure, which spilled over into everything and I haven't been able to keep up with anything. It is depressing and overwhelming to spend all day surrounded by sad tanks and have too much other work to do to figure out how to improve them.
Then I started lurking more here again and was drawn back to everyone's enthusiasm and problem solving, which has always been here. Then @Coral reefer calmly and easily had a bunch of ideas, which shocked me. Due to some family needs I have no big plans for my spring break this week, which is actually good, and last week was the last science field trip of the year, which is a huge relief bc they take so much planning time.
My 105g reef is 11 years old and is getting a behind the scenes makeover. Apex hasn't been working properly for a few years and various equipment has had issues, so imagine that spaghetti of cables. Decided to plug everything into temporary power strips (safely) to start over and clean up. Eewww - cabinet and behind tank is so messy - the opposite of what I see in other members' tank journals. Started cleaning it and feeling my excitement return. I think recent sandbed vacuuming, water changes, and fixed light cycle are helping bleached corals recover. Had to leave due to obligations, but felt like working all night on it.This club and forum rock; clearly, without you people I would have left the hobby. I look forward to updating my tanks in this journal.
