September 17, 2025
Battlecorals Buy #2
In early June, I bought again from Battlecorals. This time I got a Backdraft and Muthaship. Expensive red tables. Adam threw in small BC Aquatic Man and a Mariachi Static frags. Pretty happy about all of them.
Backdraft is perhaps overpriced, but, IMO, it’s a really good red. The tips have a faint orange glow or turn blue when growing fast. The base was blue, then brown, then mostly blue, but still not as nice as when Adam sent it. Again, maybe it's overpriced, but it is really nice. A tough one too. I’ve had mixed success during this period, but this one has consistently based and branched, often with very nice coloration. Recommend if you can stomach the price.
Muthaship did not look at all like it’s online pic. I still like it a lot, but it’s very sugary with lots of bushy polyps. More pink and purple with some green, especially at the edge of the base. My frag was quite large, about 3” long with a base already spilling off the plug. Like the backdraft, even during a period with a lot of turbulence, this one has grown quite happily. It isn’t branching or growing up yet. A very nice one.
BC Aquatic Man was growing well for me in a spot that’s not especially bright and is somewhat turgid. Light blues and mostly green. Lost all its orange and red, but it did grow. I would expect that to come back in better conditions. I eventually trimmed a barnacle off and moved to a higher flow area after it looked like the base stopped expanding and started retreating. It’s in transition now. Little worried about it.
Hyperberry had lost some color at its rim before bouncing back. It never had a hot streak. It just kind of muddled along. Then I dropped a frogspawn on it and moved it to a frag rack. Doesn’t look like it’s going to survive the euphylia sting. Another unforced error.
SCOP basing very slowly. Seems to like it when the glass is dirty. Waxing and waning but mostly growing. Currently back on a hot streak with the extra light it’s getting on a side that was previously shaded. Color is still insane. I totally get why people like this one. A must have, imho.
Bill Murray is doing good. It based a little bit, then started growing up. A nice change from the acro that bases out forever. I get why people like this one. Mine now has a more uniform “dirty diaper” color – as opposed to the bright reds and oranges – it’s still a very neat translucent color. The only problem I’ve had with this is the laminar flow at the back seems to be irritating the base on that side. I’m going to have to intervene by changing the flow somehow. Otherwise, it has grown nicely for me.
The back of the rock is kind of an experiment now with several small frags in high light/high flow area. Miyagi, bc mariachi static, and pc rainbow.
The vivid confetti is doing well. That pink color is amazing. It’s really glowing. To me, this is a must-have acro. It’s basing and growing up slowly but surely. No new branches yet. It went through a long period of slowly bleaching at the base, but then stopped and slowly colored up again. Its overall color changed too – from a uniform highlighter pink to the more classic pinks and purples with yellow polyps. I take it as a good sign when a coral bounces back. It makes me think it can do it again. To me, this one is up there with the SCOP in terms of must have acros. That said, I’ve seen other SCOPs and confetti’s IRL that did not look nearly as bright as mine.
Another Weeklong Vacation
We were gone for a week in June and I had my mom take care of the tank. No water changes. Just skimmer cup and dosing. I was surprised by how angry many things were when we got back. I could see before we left that the hair algae was about to go on a hot streak, but, unchecked, it grew faster than I expected.
Forest Fire Digi Mysteriously Died
My forest fire digi closed up and died in weird patches. I thought it was the nudis again, but I never found any and the pattern seemed different. It suddenly went from having to trim it back several times to dead in several patches. I don’t know why. PE was retracted off and on before I left for a week, but it really turned a corner while I was gone. Mysterious. I hoped that it would grow over the skeleton, but it never stopped slowly dying and once the hair algae took hold on the skeleton, I had to call it. I fragged it, but that didn’t seem to help either. Then I dunked the frags in peroxide – something I’d done several times before – and that was it. Flesh came off even though the polyps were out. This one stings since it was one of my favorites in terms of color and growth and I have no theory for why it suddenly went from boom to bust. Not done trying on montis but I am feeling cursed. I love them, but they do not love me back.
Killed a Setosa Like a Dummy
My montipora setosa had some slow STN. I’d had really good success with montipora digis and hydrogen peroxide, so I tried that. Unfortunately, big mistake. Wow. It hated it. STN became RTN. A lot of flesh sloughed off within a few hours. Feeling a bit dumb about that one, especially since it’s a nice sized piece. I’ve avoided turning little problems into big problems until now. I knew it was a risk, but it was truly a total failure.
Coral Changes
It looks like the Jason fox favia/favites was attacked while we were gone. It was basically dead when we got back, even though it was only slowly losing flesh around the edges when we left. The flow mainly goes in one direction there, so anything in that spot is pretty defenseless against the favia’s sweepers.
I passed on the spongedes. It was just too big and unruly. I didn’t like the grip it was getting on the rock. I was worried it would be impossible to remove. There are some remnants left that are slowly staging a comeback. May kill them with putty later, but it’s neat to watch it claw its way back. I kept a little frag on a plug too.
I got another kryptonite trumpet and promptly killed it with flow this time. It’s still not dead, but it’s crossed the point of no return several weeks ago. Maybe I’ll put it in a good spot next time. : ) Because there are so few spots in a small tank, I’ve ended up putting a lot of things I like in bad spots and waiting to see if they can hack it.
I cracked and got another euphylia. A frogspawn that’s probably too big. I wanted something more compact and the green color is on par with other nice torches I’ve seen. I was a little worried 300 par was going to cook it, but then I cranked up the flow and it got real mad, so I moved it. It seems happier in its new, lower par, lower flow spot, even after I turned the powerhead back up.
Fish #2 – Tiny Clownfish
I finally added a small clownfish a few days ago. My hope is the tank will benefit from the secret sauce of more ammonia/fish waste. It’s a major change and the tank was pretty grumpy last time I added a fish, but my hope is I’ll have more control over the inputs with a fish that eats pellets. I was dumping food last time trying find something the rainford would eat. I found it really hard to make the frozen foods in consistent amounts that were small enough for one fish. Plus clownfish are the best and the tiny ones are ridiculously cute. My two year olds love it. A major upgrade over the shrimp.
Water Testing Not Telling Me Much
All major water parameters were almost exactly the same during this period (Q3 2025). Alk is something with an 8 in front of it. Calcium is about 400. Nitrates are steady at 0.22 to 0.17. Phosphates move around a little, but are still 0 more often than not. Occasionally, they’re up to 0.06. I don’t test for that very often. I occasionally test for calcium and magnesium, but I’ve never seen anything usual there. I personally haven’t found these numbers very helpful in understanding what’s happening in my tank. When something is visibly wrong, I have yet to see it reflected in those tests.
I moved my alk up from 5.5 (admittedly before I had many sps) and my nitrates from 0 to 20 and haven’t noticed a difference after 9 months. I still have the same two steps forward, one step back rhythm. Slow growth overall too. I’m dosing nitrate in small amounts daily and the math seems to be keeping it pretty steady, but I haven’t noticed any significant improvements in colors. It’s possible it moved my forest fire monti from a lighter peach to a brighter orange. Hard to say. I’m ramping down dosing and plan to stop entirely in a couple weeks.
I still test weekly and I see the value in theoretically being able to detect a catastrophic problem metastasizing while you can still react to it, but, for my maintenance purposes, it’s hard to see a visual correlation. My numbers are pretty steady but I still have tank wide ups and downs. Usually it’s some sort of nuisance (hair, bubble, cyano, etc.) going on a hot streak and then my LPS, especially encrusters like chalices and favias, start to pull up their skirts and maybe some SPS have retracted polyps or start to bleach slowly. Then, when the problem feels really impossible, the fever will break and the tank will be good for several weeks. There are more good times than bad, so I feel like I’m winning, but maybe when you run a really small tank like this, you need to have corals that can live with the swings because that’s part of life with a really small tank.
Cyano Outbreak
Now I’m dealing with a cyano outbreak. I’d never had cyano until I started dosing nitrates and for many months, until now, it just stayed in a little square inch area. I don’t know what set it off, but cyano is really one of the most annoying tank nuisances. Destructive and ugly as hell. It could be the setosa slowly dying combined with letting up my water change campaign for a couple weeks (still weekly changes). Water parameters (at least the nitrates, alk, and phosphates I regularly test for) are still stable.
I’ve turned back to my usual solution of increased water change campaign. I’m also going to reduce the photoperiod from 14 hours to 8 hours for a few days.
Overall Thoughts
Honestly, even though I have kept things steadier than ever, I’ve made very few changes, and kept my hands out of the tank – the trend on the tank the last month has been pretty mixed. I don’t know why. Parameters are the same. It’s more stable than ever, but something is still wrong. I had the couple acros bleaching at the base very slowly, the mysterious dying digitata, and some LPS losing some flesh. Some corals just don’t like what I’m selling and they never grow. That’s fine. They just kind of hold on, waiting for me to go on vacation so they can die (e.g. green slimer, fox flame, watermelon chalice). But I have several right now that have grown well for me and are on this seesaw of retracting a little bit, and then growing again (e.g. confetti, shockwave, cali tort, bill murray, yellow submarine, 24k leptoseris).
Hopefully, things stabilize soon and I can finally take some concrete steps to this peninsula nano I’ve been dreaming about. Certain types of maintenance on this tank are difficult if not impossible and that’s sapping my enthusiasm for it. It’s clearly not the future and that’s bad for morale. I need to move on to this new tank that’s a little bigger and easier to maintain.