What an awesome tank Taylor! Mail me that lil purple gig, he'll look real good on the edge of my reef.
Minh, your gonna have to step up and pay for those blues and purples!!
Me too...I just got a new truck today though.

gotta get adapted to the note.
Note is only $219/mo and it's a black ford f-150 stx v8 w/ 44K.
What a sweet deal!
Congrats on your truck! It's always clearer in another's tank, but you still have to change the water..... you guys near the golf got it made, drive to fill up with the best water.... Now you have a truck for it too!
Shipping these guys, for me, has not panned out. I've ordered from every vendor in the past, with zero success. When I read guys having expectations of success, I just remember my experience and wish the best, but know what reality is with shipping. Paying through the nose, going to airports/taking days off, never worked for me, but those were the days before cipro. ALL of mine were local finds.
Taylor, you and Minh could win an award for the most stable tanks with largest bubble algae.
Minh had one on his rock the size of a golf ball.
No seriously, I gave away a lot of my live rock not long ago to go with a minimal aquascape. That was a mistake.
I'm gonna have to drive over to minh's to grab some goodies to get my tank up to par again.
Yep, I've taken out some golf balls!
My tank overstocked with gigs, won't be easily duplicated. I really struggled in the beginning to get the original 3 to even stabilize. There's a thread on here somewhere. I let macro algae grow too much, didn't realize (I should have known better), but it was so thick it was decomposing under all the top growth. Having macro, IMO, is very helpful, but with every water change, I need to suck out as much crud as possible. I try to remove it ALL, but it's so embedded, I can't. I started out with a really deep sand bed. It grows cyno. With water changed, I suck off the top layer. It's pretty thin now. My tanks can go down the toilet just as fast as the next guys, but give me a week, I can snap it back with a few cleanings, a few large water changes, and make it look just as nice as some of the others I see. It involves WORK, time, and dedication.
Like I said, my tank won't be EASILY duplicated, but can be, to a dedicated individual. I have killed more gigs in trying, than I care to admit, but through it, I've learned to kind of "read" them. They really aren't as hard to keep once acclimated, in fact are pretty hearty and handle some swings better than corals. Acclimation is the toughest part, and may take many months. My first 3 I got from my good friend Peter. I had given up by then, but he caught the gig bug and kept buying them. Right at the time Minh posted about cipro, the missing link. Even with that, I struggled. Peter was about to toss my green (the one in my 210) in the trash, he had it for months and it wouldn't turn around, even though his others were doing well. Sometimes, them being individuals, don't respond well to a system, not the system's fault, not the guy's fault, IMO, it's the individual gig didn't like something in the system. I saw that guy deflated all the time, for the longest time, and didn't think it would make it either.
I think 100% water changes, new salt water aged 24 hours, aerated, heated, in the first few days makes a HUGE difference. THEN, use DT water while in QT to see how it reacts to it. Also, for me, my gigs only get ONE deflate. If it deflates again, I take action, whether it's change water, change flow, change lights, etc. I've never seen my DT gigs deflate. Never. IF they do, it's so fast, so infrequent, I miss it. IMO, fresh imports have so much crappy water, they need a good purging, which can only happen with TONS of water changes. We can't wash them out in the slop sink. THEY have to do it, and can only happen if the water we give them is ALWAYS fresh, in the beginning, IMO, lack of is the biggest mistake made. I don't temp acclimate my anemone's. If it's close, it works... I think about them being out of water, baking in the sun, then getting hit with cold ocean water... daily... I haven't noticed they are that sensitive to temp change. They ARE very sensitive to PH. I struggled in the beginning too, with figuring out the difference in how my tanks consume carbonate, or bicarbonate (seachem's buffer, or reef builder). I use them both. In my tanks, I use one to raise the PH AND KH (buffer), but too much of that, they get mad. Then I use builder to raise KH, without affecting PH. It's a balancing act, tough to find the happy medium sometimes.
Night time, every time I look. Like I say, INFLATED 100% of the time, NOT 100% inflated, but 100% of the time ALWAYS looks good, just smaller in the dark. Never limp. Here's this morning.
And the other green in the 210.
These are some of my struggles I deal with, I hope someone can learn from some of my mistakes.
I'm hoping for some more baby gigs floating in the system, the first few I saw never took. I'm not sure if they require special care, or what, but I saw several right after I introduced one of my purples. One I planted on a rock, a couple hours later it released never to be seen again. One I put inside an API test tube. It melted the next day, I'm guessing because of lack of flow or lack of food. I was hurt at the time, so I couldn't spend any time with them. Haven't seen any in a couple months though I haven't looked lately. I can't help but think my odds of having both male and female in this tank are pretty high. I always forget to look for babies when I'm sucking all the algae out. I got rid of my peppermint shrimps, I saw them eating gig at night, and figured, maybe that's where the little ones go. Now, the aptasia have taken off. This hobby is a never ending battle at times!