MammothReefer
Active member
Hi Guys,
After many years of not having an anemone, and proboly about the same time searching for the right one I finally came across a Gigantea that I'm giving a shot. I am a bit out of the loop in how things have changed over the past few years but it seems like there has been a few shifts in the ideology of how to treat new anemones and/or less then perfectly healthy ones. I've skimmed some threads on anti bacterial setups but I don't know if it's something I should do just yet. I'll give you some background and then I guess ask a couple questions, but any advice would be great.
While this is my first gigantea, I've successfully kept bta, lta, maginfica, c. adhaesivum, and haddoni in the past.
With this anemone..
The bad:
It's bleached, and was in a low flow environment.
The good: It's got a tight mouth, It isn't expanding/shrinking, it's sticky, readily accepts food - eats it and doesn't "spew it's guts" afterwords , no visible signs of any rips or tears. It has been living at the store I bought it from for the past 3 months where it supposedly has been getting less bleachy (but to me.. it's still bleached even if I can see some "yellowish/browing" in some of the tenticals )
My 2 questions---
1) Feed or don't feed? I'm reading both. In the past I always fed my sick/bleached anemones with selecon socked food. Now I'm seeing posts about sometimes the food can cause issues and to just give it time?
2) Flow. High, medium, low? I know these nems are partial to higher flow environments. It's the main reason I went this species as it will be sharing it's space in an sps dominant system but I also don't want to just blast it right out of the get go when it's in less then tip top form.
Not the best picture but the lights aren't on yet. It's a lot bigger then it looks in this photo as well.
After many years of not having an anemone, and proboly about the same time searching for the right one I finally came across a Gigantea that I'm giving a shot. I am a bit out of the loop in how things have changed over the past few years but it seems like there has been a few shifts in the ideology of how to treat new anemones and/or less then perfectly healthy ones. I've skimmed some threads on anti bacterial setups but I don't know if it's something I should do just yet. I'll give you some background and then I guess ask a couple questions, but any advice would be great.
While this is my first gigantea, I've successfully kept bta, lta, maginfica, c. adhaesivum, and haddoni in the past.
With this anemone..
The bad:
It's bleached, and was in a low flow environment.
The good: It's got a tight mouth, It isn't expanding/shrinking, it's sticky, readily accepts food - eats it and doesn't "spew it's guts" afterwords , no visible signs of any rips or tears. It has been living at the store I bought it from for the past 3 months where it supposedly has been getting less bleachy (but to me.. it's still bleached even if I can see some "yellowish/browing" in some of the tenticals )
My 2 questions---
1) Feed or don't feed? I'm reading both. In the past I always fed my sick/bleached anemones with selecon socked food. Now I'm seeing posts about sometimes the food can cause issues and to just give it time?
2) Flow. High, medium, low? I know these nems are partial to higher flow environments. It's the main reason I went this species as it will be sharing it's space in an sps dominant system but I also don't want to just blast it right out of the get go when it's in less then tip top form.
Not the best picture but the lights aren't on yet. It's a lot bigger then it looks in this photo as well.

