- Joined
- Jan 14, 2020
- Messages
- 71
- Reaction score
- 94
I've mostly left the tank alone since April, and I'm glad I have. The coraline has established itself all over my rock; some yellow tunicates and a red feather duster worm have appeared out of nowhere; the micro life is really thriving with tons of pods and hydroids; my snails and crabs seem to have found their niches and aren't really murdering each other too much; and my mushroom corals are splitting and spreading over a bit of the left hand rock.
Less good news is a growing number of aiptasias. More than I can conquer by hand. I am considering berghias.
Casualties to date include my large halloween hermit, Freddy, who just vanished one day. No sign of him anywhere. I wonder if he was molting and got eaten by something else. He was cool, I'm sad.
A couple weeks ago I finally added fish. Meet pasta and meatball, which are tank-born occelaris "gladiator" clowns. $5 more than regular occelaris but the only ones my LFS could claim were bred in captivity. Apparently too young to yet have established sexes, they are a surprising amount of fun to watch. They have clear personalities and are very interactive. My kids (who named them) love them, of course. At the same time I added Pinhead, a blue tuxedo urchin, with a view to having him conquer my moderate green hair algae infestation. So far he's been moving like he's eating it, but I am not seeing much reduction. Oh well; It's on the back and side glass, not the rocks, I don't really mind it.
Less good news is a growing number of aiptasias. More than I can conquer by hand. I am considering berghias.
Casualties to date include my large halloween hermit, Freddy, who just vanished one day. No sign of him anywhere. I wonder if he was molting and got eaten by something else. He was cool, I'm sad.
A couple weeks ago I finally added fish. Meet pasta and meatball, which are tank-born occelaris "gladiator" clowns. $5 more than regular occelaris but the only ones my LFS could claim were bred in captivity. Apparently too young to yet have established sexes, they are a surprising amount of fun to watch. They have clear personalities and are very interactive. My kids (who named them) love them, of course. At the same time I added Pinhead, a blue tuxedo urchin, with a view to having him conquer my moderate green hair algae infestation. So far he's been moving like he's eating it, but I am not seeing much reduction. Oh well; It's on the back and side glass, not the rocks, I don't really mind it.