A little reading: Blue Coral Method

Reef Aquarium & Tank Building Forum

Help Support Reef Aquarium & Tank Building Forum:

Also on the L Glutamine, try to get it in vegatable base. No frutose, no yeast.
I use Country Life. Claims to be preservative free supplemented with vit. B6.
you can look it up here: www.country-life.com
 
Also on the L Glutamine, try to get it in vegatable base. No frutose, no yeast.
I use Country Life. Claims to be preservative free supplemented with vit. B6.
you can look it up here: www.country-life.com

Awesome - thanks. I'm off to the store for some L glutamine - after reading some more, it seems this is aone of the key building blocks.

so... I'm still a little hesitant on the sugar, what would be the downside if I didn't use it? (layman's terms please)
 
Awesome - thanks. I'm off to the store for some L glutamine - after reading some more, it seems this is aone of the key building blocks.

so... I'm still a little hesitant on the sugar, what would be the downside if I didn't use it? (layman's terms please)

Hey Ben, I have no choice but to put into laymans terms, I can't speak in scientific jargen.
The sugar is used for a carbon base to bind the bacteria and to also help to strip any excess nutrients. This dose not mean it will strip your tank of nutrients though. The guys on reefitalia say it is a necessary ingredient. I'm using it in my food. It's about a table spoon in the entire recipe which is fed over several months. So I doubt there can or will be any adverse effects on the corals. In your tank I would start with around 15ml a week. Which is a cube about the size of what frozen brine shrimp come in the frozen cube packs.
 
As far as the "packaging" goes, would a Formula One package work? They are about the same, aren't they?

One in the same. I was using one cube once a week, I just started using one cube every four days, after six weeks at the start.
 
Same with the AA's?

I still use Reefplus AA's per instruction, twice a week by itself. But when I feed every four days I use it that day also a couple hours before. Doing this stimulates more polyp extension for feeding during lights out.
 
One other thing, this food works equally as well for lps corals to. The largest elegance coral I've ever seen in a tank is in one of the Italian tanks.
 
I posted on page three of this thread some tanks from Italy. The first link shows the tank with the Elegance coral in it.
 
I don't care what anybody says, this is an interesting thread.:D :D

Thanx

In six months I will posting pics of the corals in my tank. Before feeding and after. I will post whether it's good or bad. I believe it all will be good ;) :D :cool:
 
I think I mentioned this somewhere before, are you taking pics all along the way?


I wish Sue had a camera.:D :D :D


Yep, about every six to eight weeks. From start to finish. I plan to take a bunch this week. I've added several frags since starting this so those should be some good indecators of growth from frags. I don't expect all corals to react the same as others but do think there will be improvement across the board. I didn't want to post to many in this thread want to wait till the end of the six months. Then fill a thread with pics with date of when each were taken.
I'm hoping maybe a friend of Sue's will help her out with some pics of her tank over the next several mos. I may just go down and take some for her.
I wish I had a good camera. The Canon Rebel xt is on my wish list. Right now I'm using a Kodak Easy Share. Gets the job done, just no macro shots.:(
 
Well.. just finished taking my pics and the ingredients are about to be put in the blender as I type. I'm hoping for good results. I decided to reuse some of my old frozen food cube trays.. they are about 3ml each which will make it much easier than breaking a full cube into pieces.
 
In six months I will posting pics of the corals in my tank. Before feeding and after. I will post whether it's good or bad. I believe it all will be good ;) :D :cool:

I also believe it will be good, and I apologize if I have given the impression that I am some how against feeding our systems. Quite the opposite actualy and also feed my system two 15ml doses of liquifed (by blender) shrimp each day, one dose during the day for my daytime feeders such as my turbinaria, and the other dose about two hours after lights off for the nocturnal feeders. To not feed a system would not make any sense at all to me. My issue is with adding additional amino acids in the form that is being suggested and with jacking up elements above their natural levels. Granted, it all probably does no harm, and it is very likely that it does no good either. At such small doses (sugar in mind) the system can probably deal with it, but should it have to? I just don't see it being of any use and more of a potential, however slight, problem. From reading others responses, A good many seem to be using the so called "light" version. Just feeding their systems. Thats great! and you will of course see your corals respond in kind. Any well fed animal would. As noted, any changes to a system needs to be done gradualy, all very sound advice.
Over the course of the last 25 years I have seen a great many "methods" come and go, and then come and go yet again. After the initial "wow" factor has worn off, it all usualy goes back to just plain old basic husbandry skills and trying to emulate nature a bit better (DSBs, water changes, feeding and so on). There is no magical formula for good coral health and growth, You will get the same results of any "flavor of the month" method by providing the corals with what they recieve in the wild, which is good water quality, good lighting situations, and food. I personaly have never seen a need to experiment with unnatural additives or unnatural levels of naturaly occuring elements. I've also never seen an unnatural additive / level method actualy do what is claimed of them. A lot of big words and explanations are used to justify them, but when has anyone ever actualy seen such methods last the test of time and the test of actual hard core data? Iodine dosing is a good example, how many claims were made that shrimp and soft corals NEED it, and need it in great quantities, and when this "info" hit the streets, almost everyone ran out and started dosing it. Yet there was no data what so ever to support it. The only data that I have seen shows it in a negative and/or "of no use" light. (per dosing). As is the case with all of the additive/level methods that I am aware of. They all tout a great benefit with just ancedotal observations and guessing, then when an actual study is done, quite the opposite is proven.
Again, by all means, Please! feed your corals, but for me, I would hold off on the "additives" until a study is actualy done. The odds of such a study showing it being of harm, or at the least, being useless, are much greater than it being of use. In my opinion. Ya'll have a great week!

Chuck
 
Made up my batch and here's what I included

20 smaller tiger prawns (cocktail size)
5 live oysters
5 live clams
5 live mussels
1 teaspoon white sugar
500 mg capsul of L glutamine
275 ml water (had to do more b/c it turned into a thick gel like substance)
10 g of spirulina (20 500mg pills)

it's kinda gross- turns into a thick green slime. It's in the freezer right now in cube trays. I'll show you some pics probably tomorrow of what my concoction looks like. :D :D :D
 
Last edited:
Yah now go grow that new purple coral super huge so we can trade =P

:D :D :D some call me a tease, but I don't know why...:D :D :D

let's just say reef mystique made me a very happy man..

396164163_a6dc1e6f39.jpg
 
so.. got these downloaded a little sooner than expected..see what I was talking about a Green thick gelatiney (yes I know it's not a word) ooooze.

396160638_b5ba66dca3.jpg


396160639_54d8d9ad75.jpg


396160641_d950abd93d.jpg


396160643_2670de54c7.jpg



It's pretty messy stuff, but most fun i've had in the kitchen in a while. :D :D
 

Latest posts

Back
Top