Blog Comments

  1. Floggin's Avatar
    Thats so sweet! I cant wait to see more!
  2. losbeek's Avatar
    well google isnt funding it but they are involved with some of the technology, similiar to google earth, regardless, great site, fantastic 360 degree pics and great cause.
  3. melev's Avatar
    Check on this coral 15 minutes after you've fed the tank, or 30 minutes after lights out. If it is open, feed it with the flow off. Try to give a piece of mini-mysis to each mouth, even those that are half-closed. 15 minutes later, check on them again and see if they opened up further.

    I've been keeping suncorals for years now, and they have to be fed regularly to keep them happy. When I get lazy, the coral suffers. I have three colonies right now, two yellows and a deep dark green branching kind.
  4. Myhahockeykid's Avatar
    They really need to "smell" food especially right when you first acquire them to be willing to open up. Shipping/collection/sitting in the store unfed for days if not weeks really p*sses them off...try the container method and let me know how that goes.
  5. losbeek's Avatar
    great advice, thanks
    i didnt mention this but i did try the cut out half gallon milk container method to stop the flow to see if i could get them to eat but no dice. (im thinking midnight was right, cause i did have my actinincs on) as u can see the bottom polyps opened up but none of the larger top polyps
  6. Myhahockeykid's Avatar
    P.S. to my last comment...I try not to leave them in the container for more than 1 hour as the water then cools down and becomes gross. But what is nice about the container method is that you don't have to dump all of that uneaten food into your reef. My suncoral now eats 2 cubes of spirulina brine per day, I just toss it in my 40 breeder frag tank and let the powerheads blow it around for the coral to eat. That said I have ~225g of water volume, zeolites, biopellets and a kickbutt skimmer to deal with the extra nutrients.

    Good luck and keep asking questions.
  7. Myhahockeykid's Avatar
    I have a colony that is 100+ heads in my grow out tank. Mine opens up whenever I even feed my main tank it can just "smell" but at the beginning I had to use the tupperware method. Yours looks alot healthier than mine did a year ago. Put it in a tupperware with tank water and sprinkle a little frozen cyclopeeze in the water. Then put a towel over it (to make it dark) and wait 10-15 mins. If you see any tentacles poking out, place a frozen brine shrimp (I use hikari flatpack brine and hikari spirulina brine) on the tentacle. The key at the beginning is it give it a chance to eat without any flow, the coral uses a lot of energy to open its polyps so you need to make it worth their effort.
  8. losbeek's Avatar
    yeah, ive read that the lighting conditions dont necesarrily dictate feeding responses. but i guess i will have to try that. i have been trying to feed them after the MH's go out.

    also, when i checked them this morning they looked like they were "trying" to open. im thinking just keep trying otherwise they will definitely die.
  9. Midnight's Avatar
    I think the Sun coral only opens in low/no light
  10. Floggin's Avatar
    Great pictures! Good job.
  11. losbeek's Avatar
    yeah could be. its some sort of euphyllia. also thats a green fungia not favia.
  12. steve8855's Avatar
    last one looks like a hammer coral not a frog spawn
  13. melev's Avatar
    You might be able to create a neww canopy and arrange the lights in a way that the colors even out better. My tank is 10,000K - 20,000K - 10,000K.
  14. melev's Avatar
    FYI, this is a blog so you don't have to limit your entries. They can be long and filled with images, allowing people to comment under your entire entry.

    That means you add as many images as you like, and type up all the detail you want to share. With other sites (forums specifically) you post message after message to create a "build thread". Here on RA, each blog stands alone and stays as a history of your tank. People can subscribe to your blog and get email notifications each time you type up a new entry, and they can read your previous ones by accessing all of your blogs on a single page.

    So you can summarize your current system as one entry, and then a future entry might be all about your newest addition or DIY project.

    If you have questions, just ask. A question can be a blog entry as well, and the answers will be available for others to read if they have similar questions in the future. Our Search engine is excellent, and the use of TAGS with your entry help locate topics of interest. Like my newest entry was about the new fish I purchased. The tag I attached to that blog was "angelfish" - any blogs about angels in the future will probably have the same tag, which appears in the right column of my blog entries in the Tag Cloud.
  15. losbeek's Avatar
    now that u mention it. i wouldnt mind replacing it with a retro fit w/ some sort of low profile canopy. dont really want a "boxy" look above the tank.
  16. losbeek's Avatar
    unfortunately, with my limited funds, i had a 4 foot fixture and when i got a bigger tank couldnt really afford a new lighting setup. so i bought a cheap 18" fixture to see how that would work but have yet to replace the bulb to match the bluer 20ks. currently a 10k bulb if im not mistaken(maybe 15k). the growth has been pretty good but i am going to switch because of aesthetics
    Updated 01-24-2012 at 03:45 PM by losbeek
  17. Midnight's Avatar
    Whats the deal with the light fixtures, are they running different kinds of lights?