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#1
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et al,
I have a green star polyp colony that is growing like crazy and started growing up the glass. Some crabs dislodged part and it is folded over on itself. Are these things durable like leather corals that you can just cut with a blade and its ok? Or do they have to be coaxed? I started this colony as only 4 polyps and now numbers in hundreds. I have trimmed my cabbage leather coral and am wondering if this works the same. Thanks! Dave |
#2
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Green Star Polyps (GSP) are pretty hardy and you can just cut them up
and glue them down where you want them. Kim jensalt.com phloater wrote: et al, I have a green star polyp colony that is growing like crazy and started growing up the glass. Some crabs dislodged part and it is folded over on itself. Are these things durable like leather corals that you can just cut with a blade and its ok? Or do they have to be coaxed? I started this colony as only 4 polyps and now numbers in hundreds. I have trimmed my cabbage leather coral and am wondering if this works the same. Thanks! Dave |
#3
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Mine I simply cut with a sharp razor blade between the polyps, then glued
them onto rock using Cyanoacrylate (C/A). -Todd "phloater" wrote in message ... et al, I have a green star polyp colony that is growing like crazy and started growing up the glass. Some crabs dislodged part and it is folded over on itself. Are these things durable like leather corals that you can just cut with a blade and its ok? Or do they have to be coaxed? I started this colony as only 4 polyps and now numbers in hundreds. I have trimmed my cabbage leather coral and am wondering if this works the same. Thanks! Dave |
#4
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Yep just cut 'em up. And glue 'em down or shove 'em in a hole.
It's dang near impossible to kill the things :-) phloater wrote: et al, I have a green star polyp colony that is growing like crazy and started growing up the glass. Some crabs dislodged part and it is folded over on itself. Are these things durable like leather corals that you can just cut with a blade and its ok? Or do they have to be coaxed? I started this colony as only 4 polyps and now numbers in hundreds. I have trimmed my cabbage leather coral and am wondering if this works the same. Thanks! Dave -- Ric Seyler |
#5
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phloater wrote:
et al, I have a green star polyp colony that is growing like crazy and started growing up the glass. Some crabs dislodged part and it is folded over on itself. Are these things durable like leather corals that you can just cut with a blade and its ok? Or do they have to be coaxed? I started this colony as only 4 polyps and now numbers in hundreds. I have trimmed my cabbage leather coral and am wondering if this works the same. Thanks! Dave Hey, Still new to the hobby and just want to make sure these are the ones being talked about: http://reefcentral.com/gallery/showp...1&thecat=99 8 I have seen many different things called the same thing, so a picture explains it all. I have a small patch of these that I would like to spread elsewhere. Is there any way to help them spread/grow faster once they are in their 'new' location? When cutting, do you snip it like a rose, or 'scrape the base' to get as much of the 'root' as possible? This sounds interesting! S. -- -- GNU/Linux is user friendly... it's just picky about its friends. |
#6
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Also take note, once these things get going, they will ooze over
everything. :-) You can end up with a tank FULL of green stars. If you look at many established tanks, people generally have them on a rock by themselves in the sand bed. They can be like weeds and overgrow other corals. But they are a very pretty addition to a reef tank!! RicSeyler wrote: Yep just cut 'em up. And glue 'em down or shove 'em in a hole. It's dang near impossible to kill the things :-) phloater wrote: et al, I have a green star polyp colony that is growing like crazy and started growing up the glass. Some crabs dislodged part and it is folded over on itself. Are these things durable like leather corals that you can just cut with a blade and its ok? Or do they have to be coaxed? I started this colony as only 4 polyps and now numbers in hundreds. I have trimmed my cabbage leather coral and am wondering if this works the same. Thanks! Dave -- Ric Seyler |
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