How are you showing that you care about the life of these animals when you literally say that you gave phosphates and nitrates their best chance to crash your tank, purposely overstocking a tank and not being interested about knowing the cause of your anemones death?When I say I'm crazy that just a simple way to explain my different point of view. I don't think outside the box I understand that the box is just your minds way of limiting yourself from higher thinking.
I wasn't around 40 years ago, old man, so I wouldn't know anything about that. I guess I'm just going on a journey through the times. I'll run it like an automated hydroponic system eventually for now I'm doing how I'm doing it.
I asked a question that I wanted an answer for. Instead people just want me to do exactly what they do exactly how they do it.
I care more about the life in my tank more than some lfs owners. Dead live stock to them is just a tax write off. I try to save everything I can. In the real world things aren't a perfect fairy tale. Why would I have a mindset like this: "You see that unstable nano biosphere? It'll never crash and live forever because I run tests tee hee :3"
Testing helps you discover or avoid an upcoming issue that could cause what you are currently facing.


. Do you think it developed some kind of coral disease? What is the rationale for dipping. It's obviously a water control issue - due to the fact that water changes are improving your other corals (isn't that the reason you're doing them)? My 'old man' philosophy is that you only do something for a specific reason. It's common sense to think that when all your corals start to recede - after an anemone dies - that large water changes makes sense. There is IMHO - no reason to do any kind of 'dip' - it's likely to stress the coral more. Be patient.


