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Location
Howell, NJ
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use this and get to work on fragging that thing....
 

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Location
Brooklyn, NY
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Russ,

If you wanted to frag the whole thing in one shot, the technique you described would be a really good one. You can however, just cut smaller pieces with a sharp blade over a longer period of time while leaving the colony in place. As each section heals, cut a few more etc. If you run fresh carbon each time you cut, the toxins should be manageable.

I agree with you about our dilemma as hobbyists in regards to things that grow too well. At this point however, I find it hard to get too worked up over a leather coral:) Call me a specist I guess. Randy
 

masterswimmer

Old School Reefer
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NY
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prattreef said:
Russ,

If you wanted to frag the whole thing in one shot, the technique you described would be a really good one. You can however, just cut smaller pieces with a sharp blade over a longer period of time while leaving the colony in place. As each section heals, cut a few more etc. If you run fresh carbon each time you cut, the toxins should be manageable.

Excellent to hear. I run carbon 24/7 aggressively in a fluidized media chamber. Cleaned and refreshed every 3-4 weeks already. So that's not an issue. I'll just make sure I have it refreshed before the surgery.

How much fragging do you think is acceptable using this 'in tank' technique?

prattreef said:
agree with you about our dilemma as hobbyists in regards to things that grow too well. At this point however, I find it hard to get too worked up over a leather coral:) Call me a specist I guess. Randy

That is one of the funniest lines I've heard, you specist! :Up_to_som :lol2:

I'm also leaning towards specism myself. :bigeyes2: My problem is trying to remove that sarco without breaking down the entire tank.

Thanks for the help R. If this works, it'll be like freeing up 1/3 of my 75! I'll have to find a nice frag for you. Care for a sarcophyton? :Yikes: :joke:

R
 
Location
Brooklyn, NY
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You certainly could lop a lobe and then further frag it out of the tank. In my experience, the mother colony will shrink down rapidly, but recover in short order. If you really want to get rid of the whole thing, can you just lop it off as low down on the base as possible (play with it a little so it shrinks down:) and epoxy over the tissue that remains? Seems you might release fewer toxins this way. Just a thought. Randy
 

drperetz

No more big tanks
Location
New York
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......

great speciments, my tank is beginning to look like a reef tank after that green algae took over starting to get a lot of purple coraline algae grown, very happy.:splitspin
 

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