I am sure He will smile when he reads that..<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7333480#post7333480 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by ZoeReef
Jocko, Hey.. It's easy to believe it will be. Last year was the worst in history. I don't know Richard, but the guy is tougher than Red Tide, Hurricanes and Sinking Boats. Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrr. :fun2:
Actually from what I understand it's the other way around. TBS was the only ones with a keys site and that allowed them to keep operating during the red tide outbreak last summer. But the red tide is actually what wiped out most of the rest of the rock farmers who were working out of the gulf in international waters. TBS has their gulf site closer to shore in FL waters so it was damaged but not wiped out.It is terrible that the keys lite got devestated. Richard is lucky to have the Gulf site most aquacultured rock providers are dead in the water right now because of the keys situation.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7383217#post7383217 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by jaymz101
I dont know where the Gulf site is but the Red tide last year started in Southern Tampa Bay. I work at a lab and we're seeing the makings of another bad red tide this year. An unidentified Karenia species (K. brevis is the major red tide organism in Florida) is blooming in Palma Sola Bay right now and there is another kind of algae blooming offshore that is a nitrogen fixer (read dinner bell for Karenia species) Keep your fingers crossed (mine certainly are) but it could get bad again this year.