Sorry to report ladies and gentlemen, but I came home today to a house with an ambient room temperature of 102 degrees, confirmed by my trusty radioshack temp unit with working alarm (which was beeping away as I walked in the door). it got hot here in Lubbock today and wouldnt ya know this is the day for AC troubles!!!
I didnt not post this as a call for sentiments, I know everyone is sad when a fellow aquarist loses a reef for whatever reason. Ive promised to report both the good and the bad with these experimental systems. This was simply a mini-El Nino (El Pico) event that has happened in my home, any good aquarist would rebuild and go at it again.
no, I will soon post pics of whatever surviving corals there are and document their return as well as observations of the reef system after cooldown (ie copepod life, fanworm life, crab/invert etc) It does not look good, Ive had polyp bailout/meltdown on my prized blastomussa groups but oddly enough xenia is still there and not shriveled up to a blue pinhead... thats the first specimen I'd expect to lose. Wierd. Caulastrea looks okay, frogspawn and hammers I won't know until its cooled and they try to open up again.
Moral of this story: get one of those $200 devices that senses an alarm going off and pages you or calls you on your cell phone---this would have saved everything today.
Ill post update pics and writings as soon as I work triage on the various frags. So far, the reefbowl looks about 25% dead but its the Mini75 I'm worried about---I have two 13w pcs over this 3/4 gallon reef and I would guess its been at 95-105 degrees for the last 5-6 hours. I can see several fanworms drooping out of their tubes, dead pods, dead worms etc. We'll see what can be salvaged.
Actually Im taking this quite well considering my compulsiveness about the picos....always wondered when this day would come. I always thought it would be a freak nerf-ball accident or a breakage at cleaning--never thought the ole' AC WOULD KILL MY PRECIOUS PICO REEFS
bye for now, be back soon
Brandon M.
I didnt not post this as a call for sentiments, I know everyone is sad when a fellow aquarist loses a reef for whatever reason. Ive promised to report both the good and the bad with these experimental systems. This was simply a mini-El Nino (El Pico) event that has happened in my home, any good aquarist would rebuild and go at it again.
no, I will soon post pics of whatever surviving corals there are and document their return as well as observations of the reef system after cooldown (ie copepod life, fanworm life, crab/invert etc) It does not look good, Ive had polyp bailout/meltdown on my prized blastomussa groups but oddly enough xenia is still there and not shriveled up to a blue pinhead... thats the first specimen I'd expect to lose. Wierd. Caulastrea looks okay, frogspawn and hammers I won't know until its cooled and they try to open up again.
Moral of this story: get one of those $200 devices that senses an alarm going off and pages you or calls you on your cell phone---this would have saved everything today.
Ill post update pics and writings as soon as I work triage on the various frags. So far, the reefbowl looks about 25% dead but its the Mini75 I'm worried about---I have two 13w pcs over this 3/4 gallon reef and I would guess its been at 95-105 degrees for the last 5-6 hours. I can see several fanworms drooping out of their tubes, dead pods, dead worms etc. We'll see what can be salvaged.
Actually Im taking this quite well considering my compulsiveness about the picos....always wondered when this day would come. I always thought it would be a freak nerf-ball accident or a breakage at cleaning--never thought the ole' AC WOULD KILL MY PRECIOUS PICO REEFS
bye for now, be back soon
Brandon M.