Jump to content

half-astronaut

Supporting Member
  • Posts

    368
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    9

Everything posted by half-astronaut

  1. Alright, I have two but there's some other pvc attached. They're pretty ugly, but yours if you want them.
  2. I think so, I'll check when I get home tonight.
  3. 🙋🏼‍♂️I'd like to get in line for the par meter.
  4. Haha, language filter for w t f? THAT'S PRE-FILTERED.
  5. Well aside from a couple rescue corals I don't really have any algae issues, but I only have a pair of juvenile clownfish and a few inverts in a 70 gallon. I'm extra paranoid about feeding, but I did pull some dry rock out of storage to 'scape the tank. I'm not a huge fish guy anyway so I'm taking my time on that front. I'll have to get a mandarin soon, my copepod population is off the charts 🥰. I love watching those little guys. I'm also going to admit I never, I guess, properly cycled a tank-like, months in the dark, [language filter]? I always got live rock (usually from Fl or Haiti (dating myself, I know) and live sand and sweated through a brief flare up of cyano or diatoms or whatever. This time around I bought a stocked biocube (that was 🤢 and I had to ditch the sand and most of the rock) then had to move it to my current tank. This Duncan is one of those corals I found under a cyano mat in the biocube and the hair algae is tenacious.
  6. I also though maybe the iodine dip first to build up a slime coat on the coral then that can react to the h2o2. Sounds like it doesn't take too long to kill the algae. Micah's spot treatment is probably the way I'll go, just use a micro pipette with full strength peroxide.
  7. I should clarify this is just for the hair algae, otherwise it's doing great.
  8. I've got a rescue Duncan that has some good-sized red hair algae growing on it. I've been reading about a peroxide dip to treat it, but nothing specific to Duncans. I assume a weaker, 5-10:1 mix would be safer and less stressful. I'm curious if anyone has experience with this method.
  9. Hey @TheClark, do you run a refugium opposite your dt light cycle?
  10. I'll take a cup or two, just getting the sump and refugium going.
  11. Time to hardwire my internet. Last time there were 25 'solds' in the comments before the video said what it was.
  12. Do you ever come down to Portland? I'm interested in the macro and shrooms... the mushroom coral also looks good. 😂🤣
  13. You gotta close that loop, son, tighten up your game... [sorry, I've been watching that Hulu Wu-Tang series] I think he meant out of the skimmer cup, though.
  14. Actually this should be done side by side with a clean frag tank. Take out any non-biological activity that could be going on with the rocks and coralline growth. More for hard data than developing a best practice with a typical tank.
  15. This experiment needs a control group, who's gonna buy an apex and trident and put it on an empty tank? 🤣
  16. Excellent point, but at least we have actual data, thanks for that. I wouldn't be surprised if new patterns emerge out of the Apex data, too. Each species is going to be optimized for their particular environment and we're trying to force them all together for our convenience. There's going to be metabolic variations between species and the overall tank metabolism depending on the mix of corals. Obviously mixed vs sps dominant is a huge difference. I guess the key is recognizing the rhythms of your particular tank. What a f'n interesting hobby. Does anyone know what schools are the big coral research facilities? Might be able to get a PowerPoint on the subject. On the flip side, all this collected Neptune data should get crunched a la Seti@home.
×
×
  • Create New...