Rebirth

When I bought this blue tuxedo urchin my main concern was its longevity.
After 2 years he remains well and remains one of my favorite animal in the tank. Also, until now, it proved to be really reef safe, unlike my long spine urchin.

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A curiosity about previous Blue Tuxedo photos: no adjustments have been made. No crop, no color neither light correction.
Digital photography and editing programs (I use photoshop just because) make us a little lazy about thinking about the photo.
If the composition is not good enough, you crop it ...... if the color is not true, you adjust ....... if the exposure bursts the light, you correct.
This convenience makes me take pictures without thinking about it many times. A ton at one time.
But there are also days when I like to pull a seat by the side of the tank, put the camera on a tripod, and spend a few minutes thinking about the picture.
Which is also very fun.
 
Some top downs........
Everything looks pretty when viewed from above......:p

Loripes Blue
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Loripes pink
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Nana purple neon polips
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Carolineana yellow
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Hiacynthus pink and green

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Subulata blue
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Suharsonoi eletric green
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Milepora orange
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And....a frag that I like: Nasuta pink lemonade
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I have a limited budget to invest in coral and it is not an option to buy colonies.
Even frags have recently experienced price increase over here.
It turns out that I buy small frags at a price that fits my budget.
The good thing is that I get a variety of species for a fraction of what I spend on colonies.
The bad......
Well ........ the bad is this:

September 13, 2019
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January 07, 2020
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I agree, waiting for frags to grow out is both rewarding and trying of our patience. I think it's interesting how different parts of the world seem to focus on frags or colonies when buying coral. I wonder if it's driven strictly by economics or if cultural concerns drive the different outlooks. Perhaps it's all about what is available? Your tank is coming along quite nicely!
 
I agree, waiting for frags to grow out is both rewarding and trying of our patience. I think it's interesting how different parts of the world seem to focus on frags or colonies when buying coral. I wonder if it's driven strictly by economics or if cultural concerns drive the different outlooks. Perhaps it's all about what is available? Your tank is coming along quite nicely!

Thanks!
The tank is starting a good phase again.
I hope it lasts.


To set up a tank with frags is rewarding ..... but it's time consuming ...

Here in Brazil any newly arrived colony of import, without any color, without zooxanthela, starts from 250 dollars.
The most colorful and healthy can cost $ 500, depending on the species.
So there is availability, but lack ...... money ...... :p
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

  • Yes!

    Votes: 32 45.7%
  • Not yet, but I have one that I want to buy in mind!

    Votes: 9 12.9%
  • No.

    Votes: 26 37.1%
  • Other (please explain).

    Votes: 3 4.3%
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