Just a thought, maybe your lighting issue is a contributing factor to your higher nutrients? Less light than normal = less photosynthesis/corals as nutrient export?
Maybe your low return pump turnover is not getting the fish poop and particulate to the skimmer in time and it's just decomposing in the display area before it can get skimmed out? Could explain the wet skim with high nutrients?
Newest additions, no buying corals for a while lol.
Defugium's Morning Star from CFM 5/24/25:
Defugium's Rosie Cheeks from CFM 5/24/25:
Chonk TSA Fruity Pebbles from @derek_SR 5/24/25:
RRC OG Avengers from Vivid's Aquarium 7/3/25:
BK Chem Creme de la Creme from TCK 7/11/25:
WWC...
Interesting, I'm sure your abundance of available nutrients helps being in high PAR :p
That's something I have to think about, do I have enough nutrients and flow for more light?
I was just wondering what everyone's timing is when acclimating corals to new light, more specifically when adding lights/increasing PAR. I'm sure it depends on how big the lighting change is, but what's a general guideline, a couple weeks?
I love when people bring other expertise that can be used in the hobby like pottery, photography, plumbing, 3-d printing (I just realized that's a lot of p's) and more, very cool of you!
Because spraying RODI on corals is bad. On the podcast @Thales accidentally made a KCL spray solution with RODI instead of saltwater and it messed up some of his corals.
I remember hearing on one of the Reef Beef podcasts that you could use Potassium Chloride in a spray bottle instead and have it at ready instead of having to mix up a full batch of KCL dip. Has anyone done this before?
From my understanding, you use the same ratio of KCL to saltwater to make...