Frags for Sale or Trade: Trumpets, Zoas, Mushrooms

Tanque Verde

New member
Prices are listed below. Pickup is at Swan/Speedway. With the exception of the mushrooms, all of the items below were fragged several weeks ago or more. All pictures were taken under a Phoenix 150k with no flash or adjustment. I will consider trades for acans, zoas, or other lps (not freshly fragged, please). PM for details. Please honor all appointments.

#1:
Blue Trumpet. Five heads. Rock mounted. Eats cyclopeez. A fast splitter. These are definitely blue, but not spectacularly so. $18.

#2
Blue and Green Trumpets. Approximately twenty-three heads. This is a frag of green trumpets mounted next to a frag of blue trumpets. My hope and expectation is that they will grow thickly together. Neither frag is spectacularly colorful (they're not what I'd call neon), but particularly under halides, they make a nice contrast (this picture unfortunately washes out the distinction between the blue and green). I have two of these combo frags, both with about twenty-three heads. I will only sell one, but buyer may have his or her choice. $55.

#3
Zoas. Visible in the dead center of this picture is a small colony of approximately nine zoanthids. These have peachish colored mouth, a purplish mantle, and green skirts. They spread well. These same polyps are visible in the bottom left corner of the picture, but that frag is not for sale. These zoas are more colorful than pictured here, but not poppingly flourescent. $6.

#4
Dark red mushrooms with green/blue botches. This is a rock with five or six mushrooms ranging from quarter to larger-than-half-dollar in size. The mushrooms are red. From above, the blotches appear to be green. From the side, the blotches appear to be light blue. I would like to frag this rock and keep at least one mushroom for myself, but I will sell the remainders. Depending on how the rock frags, $3 or $4 per shroom.

Caveat: My frag tank has a remnant population of flatworms. I have never treated flatworms chemically, but I do have a hunting wrasse and clown. Together, these fish have reduced my flatwork population to such a small number that I rarely see them. However, the few flatworms that remain tend to congregate on the surfaces of the mushrooms. We could probably blow most of them off the mushrooms with a turkey baster prior to removal from my tank, but you may want to consider a dip or some alternative treatment.
Happy Holidays,
Ben

#1
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#2
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#3
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#4
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Most of these items are still available. What better way to invest your Christmas money? (Hanukkah gelt, Kwanzaa cash, Solstice stash, etc., etc.)

I might also be convinced to part with the red-and-green favite, about half of which is visible in the fourth pic.
 
^I'm sorry, not at this time. I don't have any experience shipping corals and my schedule is extremely tight at this moment.
 
^Lots of candy canes (some blue, some green), a few mushrooms, possibly some small rics and a yuma, small stray frags of zoas, palys, and softies.
 
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