- Joined
- Nov 23, 2006
- Messages
- 13,377
- Reaction score
- 11,088
- Location
- Los Angeles
- What state or country do you live in
- California
Please don’t buy new corals…
-Unless you research their needs before you purchase.
-Until your aquarium environment can support them
-If you don’t have room to accomodate them as they grow
-If they are chemically incompatible with your current coral population
-If you don’t want to commit to their ongoing care
-At the risk of your overall financial health
-Without being able to provide them the food that they require
-Unless you plan on sharing your experiences (and frags) with them with other reefers
-Before you find out about the conditions the seller kept them under
-Without seeing an accurate photo of the coral first
-Unless you plan on inspecting and dipping them on arrival
-That are scarce in the wild and at the limit of your skill level to care for
-Which you might be allergic to
-During the winter if you’re expecting a major storm in your area
-From a source you are unsure of without some feedback from others reefers first
-That have a dismal survival record in captivity without expert care
-Which require conditions that cannot be currently met in captivity
-That are freshly cut and glued to a frag plug (unless it’s from a local fellow reefer)
-That need to be “nursed back to health”, unless you have the facilities to do so
-Unless you’re ready for a lifetime addiction!
And, of course, unless you’re willing to….
Stay Wet.
Of course, you can probably think of 20 plus more reasons…please share and discuss!
Scott Fellman
Unique Corals
-Unless you research their needs before you purchase.
-Until your aquarium environment can support them
-If you don’t have room to accomodate them as they grow
-If they are chemically incompatible with your current coral population
-If you don’t want to commit to their ongoing care
-At the risk of your overall financial health
-Without being able to provide them the food that they require
-Unless you plan on sharing your experiences (and frags) with them with other reefers
-Before you find out about the conditions the seller kept them under
-Without seeing an accurate photo of the coral first
-Unless you plan on inspecting and dipping them on arrival
-That are scarce in the wild and at the limit of your skill level to care for
-Which you might be allergic to
-During the winter if you’re expecting a major storm in your area
-From a source you are unsure of without some feedback from others reefers first
-That have a dismal survival record in captivity without expert care
-Which require conditions that cannot be currently met in captivity
-That are freshly cut and glued to a frag plug (unless it’s from a local fellow reefer)
-That need to be “nursed back to health”, unless you have the facilities to do so
-Unless you’re ready for a lifetime addiction!
And, of course, unless you’re willing to….
Stay Wet.
Of course, you can probably think of 20 plus more reasons…please share and discuss!
Scott Fellman
Unique Corals


lol not kiddidng at all

