Isn't that a lot more work?

Like @griss said, inspecting for acro eating flatworm bites/ scars is wise and a must with any new acro curious if you had a chance to do that? IME valida is one of AEFW favorite species to feed on
The scars they leave behind look like little white poka dots.

nstead of doing a PVP / betadine dip or Revive - (which Revive is great for softies/ LPS but is quite stressful to Acropora)
Id recommend sourcing some food/USP grade potassium chloride, it's very safe and the least stress inducing dip for Acropora Bulk supplements is a trusted brand, dissolve 1tblsp/ 16g in 1 gallon of aquarium water and dip with light basting for 7min, if there are FW present you will see them come off pretty quickly.

thats good advice, although too late on the revive. I actually did give it a revive dip last Friday I think, and I removed the portion that was turning white out of an abundance of caution. It may end up being a live and learn scenario as it's my first acro. I've had a lot of luck with easier SPS like pavona and montis. actually, we have this cool frag.. I snipped 3 small pieces off a pavona we had on our old tank as an experiment and plunked into my 4g nano. I'm glad I did because they survived our big tank crash and are now in the new tank. They're growing really well already and I find it interesting that they're encrusting over the plug first which I never noticed on the mother colony. I"ll try to get a picture later.

thank you for the compliments, and I'll look into the cholride solution! in the revive dip, I saw a number of critters come off that I did not recognize. but from pictures I see on the internet, I may very well have shook some AEFW off, as well as a brittle star I think. I didn't even know I had a brittle star, it's amazing how such tiny buggers can hide on even an SPS frag...

Nice progression, also this thread is just a reminder of how addictive this hobby is, I'm impressed you were able to stay away from it for 10 years, all it took was a 10gallon gold fish tank it sounds like

isn't that funny? today I was just thinking for the first time since January I'm at work and pretty excited to get home and check on the tank, feed the tangs, dabble with stuff.
 
I'm testing the AB+ product at the moment because it has rave reviews until I can get into the distribution of my local girls phyto. Her live foods business has taken off so well that all the local reefers have subscriptions with her so I'm "on the list" to get worked into that as she ramps up production. Anyways, I like to dose things like that in the morning before work so the water is clear when I get home. Today I noticed that new BTA had decided to move in the middle of the night so we'll see.... my old BTA was awesome. front and center, growing like a weed, hand fed, splitting...

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here is the pavona I split last summer and luckily had in my nano tank. I had simply cut a few ears off and glued them down, I didn't even notice that it had taken to encrusting over the plug I had located it too, so my assumption is that it's healthy...

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bargain bin Gorgonian my wife loved this weekend next to a beautiful digi.

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my two original types of GSP now in the big tank, setup to grow along the back wall

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I had picked up a lawnmower blenny to keep hair algae under control

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However within about 2 days of adding these characters, all green disappeared off my rocks.

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my wife had been eyeing the anthias as well ever since seeing a handful of them in the LFS's 900 liter system.

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The tank really feels like something again! adding the Foxface and the Scopas was enough activity to pry the hippo tang out of hiding who now spends more time out with the other fish than hidden in her caves, and has gone from ONLY eating pellets, to eating mysis, nori sheets, and anything else I throw in there.

The water was so crystal clear when I got home last night I almost got nervous so I fed extra and this morning made sure to put in fresh nori at 5am before headed off to work.
 
If I remember correctly, that Gorg is of the non-photosynthetic variety. Great polyp extension.

I think you're right. when we were looking at getting back into seahorses gorgs were one of the few corals considered safe and they were very hard to find locally, plus expensive to mail order so we skipped them. This one was $15 and so we picked his brain about it a bit and his only real thoughts were good flow so it could capture enough food but not have sediment sitting on it. the takeaway I had from that was aside from the lighting, similar to euphylia/torches. so far it seems happy! Its kinda pretty feels like some sort of japanese maple/bonzai/cherry tree coral hybrid.


This morning I did see a little PE on the acros which made me quite happy. I'm not going to stress over them since everything in the tank is doing well, I'll just stay the course, feed heavily like I do and see what becomes of things. the less I tinker with coral placement the happier they usually are, lol.
 
Indeed it is , Diodogorgia nodulifera I believe. With heavy feeding it may fare okay
whats your idea of heavy feeding in terms of actual food and frequency? since my bioload is now heavier again I have recommissioned my auto feeder for a small feeding a couple times in the day after lights come on while I'm at work, and in the evening I feed frozen which everyone in the tank seems to love. since my tanks have finally discovered the nori sheets, I'm going to have to figure out a better long term solution there because they can destroy one in an hour or two, lol the two little fishies magnetic feeder has been GREAT, but its going to need a lot of use.
 
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