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Very Nice!Greetings from England....there are some lovely examples here, i have just changed my addiction from SPS to focusing on goniopora now as i felt i wanted to do something different and i like a challenge..., i have had some success over the years growing a really nice red one with green & yellow centres with pink stalks, i have grown this from a small frag, its taken me 6 years to grow it to this size but it has gotten too big so i have started fragging it, his takes pride of place on my "goni bommie", excuse the top that i sliced off for fragging....... i have found this one to be very very aggressive, in fact its so aggressive brushing my bicep against the frag rack leaves me with a heavy rash for a week, its fine handling it normally but on softer skin its a real pain, still fragging it does allow me to buy some other nice pieces when they come up for sale, gonis of this standard dont come up very often over here and when they do it hurts the wallet....
The green base one was picked up a few months ago ...
....and the purple & orange one was bought last week, i have high hopes for these new ones, fingers crossed.
I just bought a green flowerpot. I have it acclimating as I'm typing I wasn't aware of the difficulty in keeping these corals. I was going to do a bayer dip after its done acclimating. how should I go about this? is it the same process as other corals?
Thank you it does have four little brown spots on it. however, it was fully extended at the fish store and looks really healthy. is it ok ot lift out of the water to brush off and inspect? ive heard they a sensitive to airIME the single biggest determining factor in goniopora success is initial transport, handling and acclimation to a new tank. I believe that goni's get labeled as difficult because they are very susceptible to disease when stressed or injured. Once healthy and acclimated they are much more manageable. I used to do bayer dips on my goni's (as well as any other coral) but since loosing a few back to back I've stopped in favor of a soft toothbrush scrub down, visual inspection, and hope. Ideally I'd QT the frags for a while to make sure nothings funky. The reason being is that I've noticed with the past couple of frags I've picked up havent responded well to their dips. YMMV and good luck.
Thank you it does have four little brown spots on it. however, it was fully extended at the fish store and looks really healthy. is it ok ot lift out of the water to brush off and inspect? ive heard they a sensitive to air
Not sure what to do about this. Zoas moved and took over the goniopora’s rock. It’s fully covered most of the time but is able to peak through every day. It’s a survivor.