When I first mixed this stuff up, the color was blood red, and I thought something must be wrong, so I emailed the company:
From Varicon, the makers of Reed's f/2 dry mix:
Hi Cathy, I'm not sure if you received this already,
we've had so many difficulties with our mails!!
Thankyou for your enquiry. Typically the F2P media
would be mixed at a concentration of 100gr/Litre.
You have mixed at a rate of 200gr/litre, this should
explain the difference in colour. Also I gather you
may have bought this from Reed Mariculture? If so this
is a very recent batch purchased last summer, therefor
the influence of the Vitamin B12 on colour will be
significant. Older batches tend to deteriorate over a
period of 2 years post mix.
I hope this puts your mind at ease!! Pleaase do not
hesitate to contact me again if you require any
further assistance
Warmest regards
Joe McDonald
www.variconaqua.com
aqua-solutions@varicon.co.uk
Nicole,
Try mixing up a small bottle of this:
20 g in 200 ml. That is approximately 4 teaspoons of the dry mix (shake/mix the bag well to get an even distribution of large and small particles before measuring) dissolved in 200 ml good water.
Try using 0.5 ml of this per liter of culture.
From Varicon, the makers of Reed's f/2 dry mix:
Hi Cathy, I'm not sure if you received this already,
we've had so many difficulties with our mails!!
Thankyou for your enquiry. Typically the F2P media
would be mixed at a concentration of 100gr/Litre.
You have mixed at a rate of 200gr/litre, this should
explain the difference in colour. Also I gather you
may have bought this from Reed Mariculture? If so this
is a very recent batch purchased last summer, therefor
the influence of the Vitamin B12 on colour will be
significant. Older batches tend to deteriorate over a
period of 2 years post mix.
I hope this puts your mind at ease!! Pleaase do not
hesitate to contact me again if you require any
further assistance
Warmest regards
Joe McDonald
www.variconaqua.com
aqua-solutions@varicon.co.uk
Nicole,
Try mixing up a small bottle of this:
20 g in 200 ml. That is approximately 4 teaspoons of the dry mix (shake/mix the bag well to get an even distribution of large and small particles before measuring) dissolved in 200 ml good water.
Try using 0.5 ml of this per liter of culture.