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#1
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![]() Oh, sure - free bump when we are still at the top! Just kidding.
I am sure the knowledgable people on this forum can help us out. I was feeding that phytoplankton live stuff they keep in the fridge but that gets really expensive so I thought I would try out the reef roids. The directions tell you to add a teaspoon for every hundred gallons of water, but not now often to do it. I am sure they would say daily, as they are trying to sell you as much as possible, but I believe most people are getting away with less. Any ideas, fellow fish loving people? |
#2
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![]() I feed 2-3 times per week. I turn off all pumps, take some tank water in a container, mix in the reefroids, dump it into the tank, turn on some pumps to circulate the food around, then turn off circulation for about an hour. i'll usually turn the pumps on every 20 minutes or so to stir up the roids that get to the ground. my brains and filter feeders usually swell up like crazy.
FWIW - i recently got some coral frenzy food as well and my corals also like it. same reaction as reefroids. As far as who's happier and puffier, they both looked the same to me.
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____________ If people don't die, it wouldn't make living important. And why do we fall? So we can learn to pick ourselves up. |
#3
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![]() It is all so confusing! I thought the reef roids were to feed the filter feeders, anenomes, other inverts and corals. Am I wrong in this? Will the reef roids be enough? I also feed NLS to the fishes.
And this may seem like a stupid question, but why do you shut off your pumps? If it goes through the protein skimmer it is no good or something? I only run a protein skimmer and a UV sterilizer. Perhaps you have carbon running? Thank you for your quick reply! |
#4
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![]() Quote:
there is no written rule. it all depends on your bioload, observations of your animals, etc. i shut off my pumps so the animals can eat as much of the stuff before its skimmed off or drained off to my sump.
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____________ If people don't die, it wouldn't make living important. And why do we fall? So we can learn to pick ourselves up. |
#5
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![]() Not the easiest question to answer simply, as like with many things, it depends.
Most filter-feeders do require daily feedings if not even more frequent than daily. Luckily most things we keep aren't strict filter feeders. The biggest exceptions I can think of are non-photosynthetic gorgonians, sponges, and so on. The downside to feeding this stuff daily is that you have to be careful not to spike your system (which is VERY easy to do IMO). Most facultative corals benefit from feedings but do not need daily feedings. In this case perhaps once a week is enough. The trick is observe your creatures and observe whether they exhibit a feeding response. If they grow and do well, then by all means, feed more, just be careful about not overdoing it. If they don't react and don't grow, then don't bother. So basically once a week, maybe more, maybe less, depends on what you have that eats the stuff.
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-- Tony My next hobby will be flooding my basement while repeatedly banging my head against a brick wall and tearing up $100 bills. Whee! |
#6
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![]() I target-feed DT's live, reef roids and oyster eggs.
However i always start with a ot LESS then recommended on the packege, observe the coral reaction and make my way from there. I can tell that blue non-photosynthetic gorgonia did not like oyster eggs, it was closed for a 3 days after feeding with this staff. Open brain loves everything. SPS goes creasy for Reef-Roids and oyster eggs. |