Reef Trendy article

Here's my quote..."Give the wife the keys to the boat, an early morning head start and a cooler of beer and you won't see her until noon...later if the fish are biting!!!" just ask my husband...
 
Anthony. Thank you so much for that article. plucked the words right outta my mouth. One of my favorite quotes: "PT Barnum said it best."

You sure we aren't related? I tend to smell heavily of garlic too, or olive oil. ;)
 
As you say, a fool and his money....

Loved this bit:

"It is possible that this one may be an even rarer and VERY difficult to find (even rare in Japan) micromussa"

Better not tell the LFS's here, they might start bumping their prices up above 3 USD a polyp.

What a load of rubbish.

Matt
 
heehee... it is so remarkable indeed :)

I am blessed to have many friends across the globe, and they all are shaking their heads in amazement at such fad s p

Don't get me wrong... if something is honestly and fairly marketed, let the market price fly as it will!

But that's the problem... sellers are making FALSE claims about the "rarity" of their corals in domestic and foreign markets... even in the sea! And they are wrong. Embellishing if not simply lying. They've never been to these reefs, worked as an importer or have any other qualification for making such statements.

So, Matt... I'm guessing you don't see boxes and boatloads of CITES protected corals being harvested from Japanese waters for shipment to the US?!?! Ha!

My question is simply if the "Japanese" Acanthastrea being pitched over here is poached or simply not Japanese.

It just cracks me up :D
 
Hello Anthony.

Most everything harvested here is for the domestic market, these are popular, hardy and cheap corals. (They are in the same price category as Doscosoma colonies and Zooanthus mats.)

I presume that the ones finding their way into the US are by-catch (can I use that terminology for corals?) when collecting other similar LPS. They have a wide distribution as you state. Maybe the shippers are not interested in checking through their entire shipment for one odd coral. I don't know.

As far as I am aware no corals are exported from Japan on a regular basis. It is illegal to collect in may areas. It is also not legal, as my good friend BurnTom has already said, to export these Acans to the US. If it were, given the price Reefkeepers in the US are willing to pay for these corals, the owner of my LFS would have shipped his entire stock in the blink of an eye and now be sunning himself on a tropical island drinking cocktails on the proceeds.

I was amused to see the ebay seller posting the Acan as a very rare colour morph (maybe it is in the US,but...). That is one of the two standard colour patterns here, red/pink/orange and another colour or various shades of metallic green. There are rarer ones around here, but they do not go for much more.

BTW recently purchased you coral prop book. What a mine of info, given me many ideas for my retirement (still 30 years or so away, but doesn't hurt to plan ahead!).

Keep up the good work.

Matt
 
outstanding info Matt... thanks so much for sharing!

And thank you for your kind words :) Please don't hesitate to chat if I can help/advise you on your future plans.

Begin to draft some outlines for models... get some simple business plan software, and manipulate the figures through the months/years as you dream. It is a tremendously helpful exercise and really prepares you.
 
Hey Anthony, don't you think we all should email the winning bidder a link to your article? :lol:
 
Good article, although I do disagree on some levels. I think it's good for the industry to have such trends it keeps people intrested, and helps deversify the available livestock. Maybe corals like acan won't hold there value forever but those who enjoy the coral, as in enjoy keeping them, growing them ect. Although may pay alot more upfront in the end will have corals available to them that weren't available before.. As the trends pick up, and the demand gets greater hopefully the supply does to, and once the dust settles and the trend bubble bursts.. What used to be a trendy coral hopefully will be a reguarly available coral.... And without the trend, and the price spike.. Those who were intrested in them would still have to search all over the place for something that might soon be common place in your lfs.
 
Great artical anthony! I agree fully about the price issues. I for one will not buy over inflated priced corals. I have always tried to wheel and deal with trades, and the likes to get something i would not pay a crazy amount of money for. I just cant see myself like you said selling off my kids college fund to buy a coral of the season.
I buy what "I" like and if it is at a fair price. I HOPE one day that theres enough people that see it this way, But as long as there are those people that want to be "elite coral consumers" and have all the stuff that no one has it will cycle on.
I see this hobby as beauty, Not to have the rarest corals on the planet.
Just like people wanting to see reciepts for blanes purple people eaters.:D As blane created them in a jar in his top secret lab.
Youre right its time for a change.
 
Hi Anthony-

Just wanted to say I enjoyed the article and had many a chuckle because of the truth to it. You have helped me a number of times on Wetwebmedia. a couple of years ago. In that time, I have learned quite q bit but realized how littile I still know...

Dan
 
Anthony,

Gimme five!
Sell high, buy low, start a frag-site, rape the slow.

These fads, remind me what my long-lived grandfather has told me.

El vivo vive del tonto, y el tonto de su trabajo

translation:

The shrewd lives off the fool, and the fool from his work.

Thank you for writing an article that I feel many of us identify with. Now back to the Leng Sy this, Ultra that. (sigh)
 
Insane-ultra-good-my-head-is-gonna-pop-off-never-to-be-seen-again-once-in-a-lifetime-article!


Thanks for making sense.
 
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