that was a very good teachers lesson, as I was taught. If you don't learn from the mistake, then it was not worth the expense. Now I own my own company registered City and state!
I just did a fragging of a Chalice coral with my Dremel. It went pretty well. It's on my channel. I have a torch that one head is almost dead and the other is hanging on. They haven't really separated yet so I'm worried about fragging it but I may have too.
saw a great way of fragging them the other day..the guy just snapped them with his hands perfect straight break little effort and no ill effects. just gets that weird angle that would still need trimming. idk if there is a reason that you don't do this but apparently there have been no I'll effects:)
Did u ever make a how to frag zoas? I just watched ur zoa video a while back and in it u said later video u would show how to frag zoas. Anyways love ur vids
I would like to see how to frag gonies. I’m learning how to frag right now I’ve been working at a LFS for around 5-6 weeks and they got me fragging already I literally just flagged the $250 a head torch you guys did in this video. Need to get some of that BRS glue looks like it works fast
Are all the employee displays taken down besides Tia?? Will the new employee get to make a display? It would be awesome to see how a beginner will actually set one up
He doesn’t really aquaculture much except a few high end pieces and the zoas. Their model is to turn and burn through their incoming shipments instead of waiting for the pieces to grow.
I need to know how to frag bubble coral. I have one bubble coral I’ve had since I started the hobby (about 4 years ago) And it has like 6 heads but the flesh is going all the way down the base all together if that makes sense. There’s no skeleton between the heads but I swear bubble coral was branching. I’m lost. Plz help
Most bubble corals grown like a cross between walling & branching, in that their skeleton grows very similar to a walling Hammer but it also separates into multiple walling pieces rather than just 1 connected piece, although like you say they usually retain some thin connective tissue to each other on the skeleton. I've found most bubbles to be very accepting of fragging & I usually have success fragging not just separate heads but also cutting straight through heads, sometimes dividing a single very large head into 10 separate frags. That said I do use a Gryphon Aquasaw which makes things easier but theres no reason it couldn't be done with a dremmel & a lot of care. I alway dip afterwards with iodine or frag recovery dip etc & superglue over the cuts I make to cover any porous holes I expose in the skeleton.