Gyr
New member
I am curious what other SPS keepers do when their tanks mature. Due to the great advice I have gotten from this forum, I have been blessed with a successful SPS-dominant reef. My last upgrade was to a 125 gallon tank 2 years ago. My SPS colonies have matured nicely, and are now getting so large that I have lost the 'open look' to my tank that I prefer. Not only that, but overcrowding is starting to cause flow/overgrowth problems.
I have been fragging and selling back to my LFS's for store credit, but my supply is exceding their demands. It has gotten to the point that I am debulking colonies and throwing the pieces out. While throwing out large pieces of a coral I spent >$50 for a 1 inch frag for years ago stings a bit, my main problem is that I have come to love these beautiful living creatures and it just feels wrong.
The idea of selling frags on-line seems very daunting to me. Packaging for survival must be complicated and the cost of shipping must be prohibitive for small operations.
Should I just get over my squeamishness and look at it as if I am pruning bonsai trees (sacrifice living parts to achieve a desired aesthetic effect), or is there another option? I have cut down my lighting cycle to try to decrease growth, but that has only helped a little. The bigger the colonies get, the faster they grow. I wouldn't have believed this would be a problem for me years ago when I first tried my hand at SPS....
I have been fragging and selling back to my LFS's for store credit, but my supply is exceding their demands. It has gotten to the point that I am debulking colonies and throwing the pieces out. While throwing out large pieces of a coral I spent >$50 for a 1 inch frag for years ago stings a bit, my main problem is that I have come to love these beautiful living creatures and it just feels wrong.
The idea of selling frags on-line seems very daunting to me. Packaging for survival must be complicated and the cost of shipping must be prohibitive for small operations.
Should I just get over my squeamishness and look at it as if I am pruning bonsai trees (sacrifice living parts to achieve a desired aesthetic effect), or is there another option? I have cut down my lighting cycle to try to decrease growth, but that has only helped a little. The bigger the colonies get, the faster they grow. I wouldn't have believed this would be a problem for me years ago when I first tried my hand at SPS....