DawgDiggity
New member
Aight, got some thoughts for a new program. There are a lot of newbies just like me who buy things on impulse. Including expensive, hard to keep SPS. For example just this past weekend I found this good sized hydnophora coral for $25. The first 3-4 days an SPS does great in my tank then inevitably digresses to a bleach white bone piece to be thrown into my GSP graveyard. I change a few things, then try again with the same results.
In this particular case I have the right lighting (maybe too bright), but extremely high nitrates (canister and no sump, fuge) and temp swings (old rental window unit). Not ideal conditions for SPS.
So my thought is this. Is there a veteran willing to nurse this hydnophora in their display, frag,..? tank until I get my parameters up to par and stable. Purchasing the right equipment, make adjustments could take 8 weeks, to a year, to just letting go completely of keeping SPS in my current setup??
I'll leave it to some varsity players to define a fair tradeoff for caring/nursing corals, but as a JV reefer I hate watching these beautiful corals (hydnophora, cali-tri, blue tort, bird's nest, scrolls, milli) take a dive when their is nothing within my limited system that I can do.
Reasoning behind a program like this is that I, in particular, can be a slow learner coupled with the fact that I have to touch the stove to know it is hot. I will make adjustments and keep trying. Giving these corals away to be nursed is a way of keeping these great corals in the club.
In this particular case I have the right lighting (maybe too bright), but extremely high nitrates (canister and no sump, fuge) and temp swings (old rental window unit). Not ideal conditions for SPS.
So my thought is this. Is there a veteran willing to nurse this hydnophora in their display, frag,..? tank until I get my parameters up to par and stable. Purchasing the right equipment, make adjustments could take 8 weeks, to a year, to just letting go completely of keeping SPS in my current setup??
I'll leave it to some varsity players to define a fair tradeoff for caring/nursing corals, but as a JV reefer I hate watching these beautiful corals (hydnophora, cali-tri, blue tort, bird's nest, scrolls, milli) take a dive when their is nothing within my limited system that I can do.
Reasoning behind a program like this is that I, in particular, can be a slow learner coupled with the fact that I have to touch the stove to know it is hot. I will make adjustments and keep trying. Giving these corals away to be nursed is a way of keeping these great corals in the club.