Tuesday, February 15, 2011

It's always something . . .

So today's installment of "It's Always Something" is brought to you by Tunze.  Since getting my new 6105s, I have been fiddling with positioning to try and find a position that doesn't blow my sand all over.  Yesterday, I tried a slightly new position, but during the night the Tunze moved slightly on it's own because the new ball style holders are not very tight.  The result was the powerhead was aimed up and sideways such that it splashed water over the sides all night long.  Not gallons but liters or quarts worth and certainly making a mess.

Last few days have been busy for the tank as I did some significant position changes.  The primary purpose was to make room for the continued growth of  my Loripes colony which was fast becoming over run by my Seriatopora and my Purple Monster.  In addition I shifted several colonies around including the bleached Strawberry Shortcake, the Nasuta, and my Stylo frag from Keith B. as well as a few others.  Now comes the hurry up and wait part to see if the changes were worthwhile.  In the meantime the right side looks amazingly bare now without the great big pink birdsnest on top  : ( Hopefully the Stylo will grow faster than it has so far as I'm trying something new and feeding Elos amino acids. I decided to give it a try after reading an article on Amino Acids at CoralScience.org.


Wednesday, February 9, 2011

It's Always Something

Today's it's always something was broken coral.  The Damsels have been doing some strange territorial dancing and knocked down the recovering coral frag and the zoos ate away at the body of the montipora so much that it actually fell over under it's own weight.  I tried to fix the monti back in place, but no luck then I tried to fix the fallen frag and it took me about 5 tries to get the glue to stick.  The whole endeavor cost me about 30 minutes of time . . .  it's always something . . .  the good news is because my tank is so low and open I just reached in and fixed everything.  No moving fixtures, no bringing in a ladder, no bending over the top of the tank, just nice and simple reach and fix.  Oh and I almost forgot this morning I found that the Deltec stirrer was stuck.  The extra kalk powder I added gummed up the rotating arm so I had to dump it out and put in the normal one cup.  Looks like the kalk stirrer is going to become a bi-weekly chore (see earlier post on pH study in the kalk stirrer) . . . it's always something.

Improvement.

Continuing to see rapid improvement in the frag that was bleached while the mother colony continues to struggle.  I did raise the lights higher, but obviously it's not enough to help given the position of the main colony.  May have to cut it out and move it lower somehow.



Saturday, February 5, 2011

On the road again . . .

Heading to Frankfurt today and had to get the tank ready for being gone 3 days.  Cleaned out the Deltec and refilled it with 2 cups of kalk.  We'll see how long it lasts this time.  Then had to clean the glass, and futz with the Tunzes.  Ever since installing new 6105s to replace my aging 6200s I'm running into problems with blowing sand, but I think I got it right now.  Also the coral frag of shortcake is continuing to recover nicely.  Look for another picture update next week!

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Eureeka! LEDs may have bleached my coral!

Had to work for 3 days and just got home last night from Zurich.  This morning cleaned glass, cleaned skimmer, added 1 L alk and 750 ml Ca+, removed carbon and phosban (after 3 days on), cleaned teeth, adjusted flow direction on Tunze because while I was gone it splashed over the top slightly when the teeth started to clog, and finally inspected the browned coral for changes and guess what . . . drumroll please . . . the coral frag I placed in low light near the bottom of my tank is making a rapid recovery and already showing hints of yellow and red zooxanthellae returning while the original colony which is higher up is till brown and white.  SO . . . I think this plus so many others experiences with bleached corals under LEDs proves to me that LEDs put out WAY more light than is registered on the Apogee meter.  I'll try to get some pictures later today, but I'm actually excited to see such results so quickly.