I'll get some pics tonight when I get home from work and post them tomorrow. The new corals are doing great and are happy under my lights. I still need to mount them into their permanent positions and hope to have time to do that this weekend. I know, melev, you mentioned that you try not to move your corals around if possible, but I had to hastily get them into my tank that night and I just looked for a place where they'd fit and not get blown around in the current. Wait 'til you see the pics - some of the monti "frags" are actually so big I might have to get rid of them or frag them down further so they'll fit into my tank.
Well, after reconsidering it further, I think I can find a place for some of the larger pieces

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I need to get some black sheet metal screws, I'm anal about things like that
Me too, that's all I used in my cabinet, and for mounting my ReefKeeper and power strip.
Bruce, you can use "dead" sand for your refugium and seed it with a cup full of sand from your tank, or you can get a cup from my tank if you like. Put the dead sand in first, then lay the cup of "live" sand on top and poke it down into the other layer to distribute the bacteria. In short time you'll have a fuge full of live sand and at much less cost. I'd give you a ball of chaeto if I could but I can't seem to grow it in my fuge. I had to strip out a bunch of dead chaeto about 6 weeks ago, and the small ball that was left fails to grow at all. I'm wondering if:
1. my bulb is inadequate (I'm using the 2700K version of the bulb melev writes about),
2. my light doesn't cover enough of the fuge since it's located in the front and aims toward the rear,
3. maybe too much flow in my fuge, or
4. maybe not enough nutrients in my water to keep it alive?
I doubt it's #3 as my sump/fuge is run by a Mag5 at about 5' of head. I don't think #4 is the reason, since the bryopsis seems to thrive quite well in my display tank and cyanobacteria covers most of the LR in my fuge. That leaves me with #'s 1 and 2, and 2 seems harder to fix than 1. So I'll probably order the appropriate 5600K bulb and see if that makes a difference in my chaeto growth.
Hey all, here's a question. While picking bryopsis off of my sand bed (yes, it's actually growing off of my sand bed too) I noticed that the sand is beginning to form large rocky clumps. Does this mean that I need more sand-sifting snails to move things around more? I had a conch but it died over a month ago, maybe I should get another one. Although I think it died of starvation so maybe that's a bad idea. Should I break up the clumps or leave them alone - I don't want to cause an ammonia spike by manipulating them. Any help/advice is, as always, appreciated.
Anyway, back to work so I can finish up and get home to take some pics!