Here's a link to the Randy Holmes Farley recipes. Given that I see a huge bag of chemicals in it, it might make a lot of two part.
http://www.reefkeeping.com/issues/2006-02/rhf/
I think I'd dump the sand and just start with fresh stuff at the new place. I'd worry about moving the tank with any weight in it for fear of stressing it.
It's neat looking. Maybe a species tank for it, or at least a safe spot in the sump. Maybe it'll eat Xenia, they could feed the crab and export nutrients.
I turned on Netflix and this documentary called Planet Earth popped up. I looked at what it offered and sure enough they had an episode called "Shallow Seas." I started watching and its full of reef eye candy. Anyone with Netflix can stream it.
http://www.bbcamerica.com/planet-earth
I have pieces of month that broke off and started growing where they fell. Even if it did not break cleanly, the colony won't mind in the slightest. That's a nice morph by the way. Did it have a name when you got it?
This is my first attempt at DBTC. I have 3 frags of what I am pretty sure is ORA Green Stylophora. I bought it as a frag labeled "birdsnest" from Aquatic Central about 5 years ago. I keep it in top 1/3 of my tank under AI Hydra 52s set to 18K at 50-60%. This stuff grows like crazy and any...
There was a reformulation in detergents a couple years ago to remove phosphate I believe. The new detergents etch aluminum and may be causing your trouble as well. Try Cacade Complete tablets.
Thanks, it took forever to settle on it, but the Halichoeres likes doing loops through it and it creates plenty of sleeping spots. If I had more room I'd go with a more Spartan look.
You are correct. I love wrasses too. I've got a moose of a Linespot Flasher, a small male McCoskers and a male Redlined Wrasse,(Halichoeres Biocellatus)