The most recent Neptune thread made me really think about the role that colour plays in the reef keeping hobby. I know that I am very colour sensitive and colour attuned (I am obsessed with what type and colour lighting is used in my home and work, I was the first on my block with a high gamut LCD monitor, I stuck with CRTs for years because of better colour reproduction, I've calibrated all of my displays for 20+ years, etc.). The colours in reef aquariums have a strong impact on me and heavily influence the specimens I choose and prefer.
How does it work for colour blind people? Is reefing less interesting to people who aren't as obsessed by colour or can't see colour? Any of you colourblind and if so, do you think it affects your specimen choices?
On the opposite extreme, my wife is blind as are many of our friends. The favourite experiences of blind people looking at my aquariums are; the cleaner shrimp crawling all over their hands when they put them in the tank and the mucus from the green slimer when I get them to touch it. One or two braver folks have lightly touched the GBT anemone ("Mmmmm numbing" in Homer voice was the best description) and the tuxedo urchin ("Not really sharp, more like a nettle or burr, but the tentacles are cool"). It's definitely not the experiences that I'm looking for from owning a tank but it is interesting.
How does it work for colour blind people? Is reefing less interesting to people who aren't as obsessed by colour or can't see colour? Any of you colourblind and if so, do you think it affects your specimen choices?
On the opposite extreme, my wife is blind as are many of our friends. The favourite experiences of blind people looking at my aquariums are; the cleaner shrimp crawling all over their hands when they put them in the tank and the mucus from the green slimer when I get them to touch it. One or two braver folks have lightly touched the GBT anemone ("Mmmmm numbing" in Homer voice was the best description) and the tuxedo urchin ("Not really sharp, more like a nettle or burr, but the tentacles are cool"). It's definitely not the experiences that I'm looking for from owning a tank but it is interesting.