Despite all of the downside potential, I acquired a beautiful 6" Red carnation sp. of Dendronephthya. I thought I was beating the odds, as it's been doing OK where I put it (good current, decent but not excessive lighting and a steady drip of a good phytoplankton substitute (Marine S***) and most importantly, it did not deflate after being transported and relocated. Until today.
Within a 5 minute period it went from beautiful to flaccid - just like someone "let the air out." I thought I'd try one more thing: I placed the limp specimen (insert one-liner here) in front of and about 4" away from a maxi-Jet 1200 and waited. Two hours later the thing is pumped up bigger than ever. Now the question: is this too much current? The Dendro looks terrific, fully extended, but it's bouncing around like a balloon being held out of a car window on the highway. I angled the powerhead ever so slightly so that the current just glances off the coral rather than a straight shot.
I feel like I may have dodged a bullet, but I also realize that this is going to be an uphill battle. The challenge is to feed enough without raising the Nitrates to unacceptable levels.
Anyway, the current is the big question for now. Thanks as always for your time.
Within a 5 minute period it went from beautiful to flaccid - just like someone "let the air out." I thought I'd try one more thing: I placed the limp specimen (insert one-liner here) in front of and about 4" away from a maxi-Jet 1200 and waited. Two hours later the thing is pumped up bigger than ever. Now the question: is this too much current? The Dendro looks terrific, fully extended, but it's bouncing around like a balloon being held out of a car window on the highway. I angled the powerhead ever so slightly so that the current just glances off the coral rather than a straight shot.
I feel like I may have dodged a bullet, but I also realize that this is going to be an uphill battle. The challenge is to feed enough without raising the Nitrates to unacceptable levels.
Anyway, the current is the big question for now. Thanks as always for your time.