Sounds good... while you're here, if you wouldn't mind cleaning the tanks/skimmers/top offs/feed the fish,dogs,chickens... in fact, I'll leave you a few lists! :lol:When you house got broken into this weekend and all your anemones got stolen, it not me OK.
Nice
Hmm... I'll think about that. There's an awful lot of carpet in there. One wrong move, it's a goner.Get a reasonable size fox face in there. It will go a long way in keeping your tank free of algae






Nice updates Dave, good to see they are all doing well. Its what I call Gig heaven![]()







Thanks, but not really impressive. I think there's too much flow, and algae/bacteria growth for little ones to settle out, and not get choked out. I put 3 frags on rock rubble to grow out on the sand, in a couple days, it was a large glob of algae you couldn't see the rock. Killed/smothered the frags. My guess, there won't be baby gigs anytime soon for anyone, unless they design their overflows to to dump into larger area shallow low flow settle out tanks. In my tanks, there's too much crud/algae/cyno that gets sucked up with water changes, no where for them to settle safely, and flow is too high.Great pictures. Just read the part about floaties/babies. That's pretty impressive.
Thanks! Gigs seem to be available a lot more than they used to. I'm sure you'll be able to find them.Very pretty Taylor !
I hope to be able to keep a gig like any of yours on of these days.
No luck so far.
Most of mine are still in the same place they were placed originally. For me, gigs never seem to move to a "better" area on their own, unless healthy. If it's sick or weak, they typically just stay in one place, deflate, and melt/die in place. A couple have moved, but only re-positioned, not really moved. They seem to be happiest when their foot is in a hole or crevice between rocks, but still get good flow under their disk, and, on the top of their disk. Seems they like their disk supported on both sides, with their foot in a "V" of rock work, 2 or 3 rocks next to each other. If starting out, I would try making a triangle out of 3 same size rocks, and place the gig's foot in the center. If water quality,flow, and light are good, it should stay put. But, always expect them to move. The one time you don't expect them to move, they will. But typically, gigs don't move much.What would you consider best placement for a gig? Or do they have a mind of their own and settle where they desire?
Yes, I've found purple and green little ones, they are tiny. My camera won't focus that small. That was the first one I found attached to poop. I tried to get them to plant themselves but they won't grab. I tried moving them to the sump of my other tank, but they wont' grab there either. I've also found baby clear ones, but those are aptasia. They look different. When low flow, baby aptasia grab really fast and easy. I'm trying to think of a way to change my set-up, I'd like to take the overflows to a longer tank, bare bottom, with a light just to shine on the bottom on all the "detrious", then have that tank overflow into the real sump. Maybe they would settle out in a longer low flow tank? Still thinking how I can do this, I'm space challenged. I'm 100% sure I have male and female, I've come down in the morning to find my skimmer overflowing, the night after a cleaning. Who is who, I don't know. I've found floating tiny ones. NO doubt in my mind. They won't attach, only guessing they need still water for a time.
Truly stunning.
I know earlier this year you were looking at selling off some of your anemones. I'm hoping this has changed and you've decided to keep them all.
They're doing very well in your care.