the problem w/your assertion about my statement being condescending is that a 12 yr. old COULD actually do it. lots of 12 yr. olds can follow simple procedural directions
for all/any of you who don't seem to be able to grasp some very simple concepts:
'magic' in the sense/context of this discussion (at least the intent/definition i'm using) can be illustrated thusly:
a long time ago (maybe not so long), no one knew what the sun was, or what laws/forces influence/govern its apparent behavior in the sky. w/no scientific knowledge, any and all explanations/assertions made are exactly akin to calling those reasons 'magic'-which is really a word meaning - 'i have no clue why or how'. if everyone was just willing to accept that for life/world observations we'd be w/out the wheel today, and people would be limited to keeping goldfish bowls only
i find it odd how people here seem to know, definitively, that this zeostuff is
affecting coral pigmentation on one hand w/ absolutely no proof, or even a reasonable hypothesis as to why this happens, and i'm sure that there's a plethora of people who dose that 'stuff' the same way they've seen someone else do it while getting different results.
there are nice looking zeovit tanks, and crappy ones. there are nice looking non zeovit tanks, and ones that look crappy. but it's not *because* of the zeovit, or lack thereof. nor is there anything involved other than kasserboom's (or anyone else's) purely subjective personal aesthetic opinion/sensibility, as regards statements like 'zeovit tanks are the most beautiful' or 'can be picked out from a mile away'.
NO ONE here has yet to provide a convincing argument to back up the assertion that one can manipulate coral pigmentation by zeovit-by kasserboom's own admission that there's too many variables automatically faults any assertion he makes about zeovit (get it?) if there's too many variables to test, there's too many variables to assert any effects from one particular item, either.
you can't have it both ways-kinda like the old 'irresistible force meets unmovable object' argument
it all boils down to how the system is managed. NOT about some particular product.
the only ones who truly have something to directly gain from its use are the ones who sell it-if you could get result 'a' regardless of whether or not you used a 'miracle product, or a bottle of 'liquid magic', why would you go to the trouble and expense of using something completely unnecessary?
(this goes for ANY 'miracle product'-remember the backyard dirt sold as 'miracle mud' ? zeostuff is in the EXACT same league-hocus pocus mumbo jumbo

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