View RSS Feed

All Blog Entries

  1. Dichromatic Trachyphyllia

    Here's a very surprising coral recently posted by Walt Smith Int'l Fiji. Too good to be true, right?

    Name:  waltsmith1.jpg
Views: 5978
Size:  79.5 KB


    Here's the link to the video on Facebook (turn your speakers down): https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v...type=2&theater

    And a bunch of images. It came out of the ocean like this; it's not some man-made merging of two colors. Neat find.


    Name:  waltsmith2.jpg
Views: 5830
Size:  88.8 KB

    ...
  2. What a unique chalice

    I spotted this on Facebook today. Image by Reefkoi. Look at the size of the polyps that opened up on this Chalice coral. I read that it's from Jason Fox's collection.

    Name:  reefkoi-coral.jpg
Views: 6405
Size:  99.0 KB
  3. Some Rock Structures I made

    Marc suggested I post some of my tinkering of Rock Structures here.

    This is Man-Made Rock, using rock studs and resin epoxy on certain joints (Using the rock studs) to make it super sturdy. A cat 5 hurricane may knock it over.

    This structure has an arch and a semi-divided branch in the back (depending on how you look at it). I used Snapseed (Google's mobile picture editor) to edit the pics as it's very difficult to actually show what the rocks look like in real life. ...
    Categories
    DIY projects
  4. Unexpected issue with my frag tank

    The frag tank holds roughly 10g of saltwater, and the corals in there are growing bigger fighting for space. I've considered building a new one to replace this one once the 400g gets here. I don't know the date unfortunately.

    Yesterday as I was looking at the tank, I noticed that one end was floating - which it never does. The first thing I did was put some shims under the end to support the corners of the tank.

    Name:  fragtank.jpg
Views: 8004
Size:  191.9 KB


    Name:  fragtank-lifting.jpg
Views: 5910
Size:  219.2 KB
    ...

    Updated 07-01-2013 at 06:18 PM by melev

    Categories
    Tank Entry
  5. June's Full Tank Shot

    Let's see your reefs! Take your pictures, resize them for web sharing, and post it in the reply field. You'll need to host it somewhere like Photobucket to share it in your reply.

    Here's the 215g, which is over a year old now.
    Name:  june-fts.jpg
Views: 5952
Size:  257.6 KB
    Categories
    Photography/Video