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Origami

President Emeritus
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Posts posted by Origami

  1. Maxspect has seen some of the recent high-profile club activity and wants to sponsor the club and FragFest. They've generously donated the following products that we'll re-package for the raffle. Specifically we'll raffle off ten sets comprising

     

    1 pair of Maxspect Coral Pruners  ($25 value)

    1 pair of Maxspect Coral Tweezers ($20 value)

    1 Maxspect Coral Gripper (60 cm) ($15 value)

    1 jar of Maxspect Coral Putty (epoxy), 120g ($14 value)

     

    The value of each package is $74 and we'll have ten packages to raffle.

     

    Thank you, Maxspect!

     

    image.thumb.png.1ce26b8bd835b9627e6a97b1eff48f17.png

  2. Event: FragFest 2022

    Saturday, October 15, 2022

    Time: 12:00 P.M. - 5:30 PM (Speaker starts at 2 PM)
    Where: North Bethesda Middle School, 8935 Bradmoor Drive, Bethesda, MD 20817

     

    This meeting is open to (DUES-PAYING) MEMBERS ONLY*.  

    * Join WAMAS at the door for $20.00 individual; $35.00 family = 1 year of membership, or save the hassle and Join Now.

     

    What is FragFest? Check out the FragFest FAQ here

     

    Speaker: Nikki "ReefdUp" Bridges (Coral Rehabilitator, WAMAS Membership Director and  owner/author of the blog CoralEverAfter.org)


    Topic: Scary Frights and Aquatic Ghouls (or "Pests in Your Reef Aquarium")

    Enter if you dare, into the world of what may be haunting your tank and lurking in the shadows of that beautiful new coral. The spiders are biting, the worms are crawling, and the slugs are leaving only skeletons behind. Join us for a truly spooktacular adventure!

     

    Nicole-Bridges.jpg?resize=300%2C300&ssl=1

     

    Bio:

    Nikki “ReefdUp” Bridges is a multidisciplinary systems engineer, military spouse, and mom to two amazing kids.  She also happens to be WAMAS Membership Director. As the daughter of a wildlife rehabilitator and native plant rescuer, it is no surprise that her favorite part of reefkeeping became rescuing injured and diseased coral.  Her passion for the last 14 years has been successfully rehabilitating over 250 injured/ diseased coral and fish.  Her efforts have also included endangered species reef restoration in Curacao and marine debris removal in Honduras.  To document these coral rehabilitation efforts, her blog, CoralEverAfter, covers novel techniques to save corals, one polyp at a time.  In the process, she's identified and treated forscores of reef aquarium pests. She has over thirty years in the aquarium hobby and currently has a 120-gallon display reef, multiple quarantine/ treatment systems, and a Berghia nudibranch breeding system.


    Her favorite moments include defeating bizarre pests, eliminating diseases, successfully beating “brown jelly”, and still managing to safeguard her favorite rescues as she moves back and forth across the country. This passion likely stems from growing up in a family dedicated to rescuing wild animals and native plants. She has over thirty years in the aquarium hobby and currently has a 120 gallon mixed reef and four quarantine/treatment tanks – ask her what it is like to move that from state to state!

     

    *****

    12:00 PM Doors open to WAMAS members (only)

    12:00 - 1:30 PM Socializing / Club business
    12:30 - 1:30 PM Tank-drilling and fragging demos

    1:30 - 1:50 PM Social Break

    1:50 - 2:00 PM Club Business & Announcements
    2:00 - 3:00 PM Speaker Nikki Bridges
    3:00 - 3:30 PM Social Break
    3:30 - 4:00 PM Raffle
    4:00 - 5:30 PM Frag Giveaway (Yes, FREE frags!)
    5:30 - 6:00 PM Cleanup

     

    Directions to North Bethesda Middle School:
    - NOTE: The school is just inside the north edge of the beltway near Old Georgetown Road.

    Here's a map from Google Maps:

    https://goo.gl/maps/bKz79Y9HmQF2

    Special thanks to theses sponsors. Please support them & say thanks next time you shop with them. You can find their website address by visiting their forum or the sponsor page on the WAMAS website.
     

     

    ***********
    Give Aways! (One per member/family while supplies last)

    F-Aiptasia (donated by Frank's Tanks. 48 two-ounce bottles ($25 value) and 37 one-ounce ($14 value) bottles

     

    Raffle Prizes*

    - Maxspect Coral Fragging Kit consisting of one pair of Coral Pruners, one pair of Coral Tweezers, one 60 cm Coral Gripper, and one 120g jar of Coral Putty (epoxy). Kit has a $74 value. Ten chances to win!

    - $100 gift certificate donated by Reef Nerd Aquatics 

    - 1 Aquabiomics aquarium microbiome test donated by Reef Nerd Aquatics ($99 value)

    - Reef Chemical Supplements kit comprising TLF KH Power, Calcium Pronto and pH Balance from SaltwaterAquarium.com ($53 value)

    - Kolar Labs Carbon & GFO package comprising 1/4 gallon of both GAC and GFO from SaltwaterAquarium.com ($60 value)

    $150 gift certificate toward any Jellyfish Aquarium Kit at Jellyfishart.com

    - Two Tropic Marin Test Kits (Ca/Mg and Alkalinity), donated by Nikki (ReefdUp) Bridges

    - 1 set of water quality products donated by Cobalt Aquatics, $147.66 value.

    - 13.5 ounce jar of Cobalt Aquatics Ultra Marine all-natural fish food, $43.40 value. Three chances to win!

    - From Boyd/Chemipure: 16-ounces of Vita Chem (vitamin supplement) plus one 2g vial of Chemiclean. $39 value.

    - From Boyd/Chemipure: Three 5-ounce size Chemi-Pure Blue, treats 35 gallon tanks for up to 1 month (3-month supply). $49.92 value

    - From Boyd/Chemipure: Three 11-ounce size Chemi-Pure Blue, treats 75-gallon tanks for up to 1 month (3-month supply). $83.31 value

    - From Boyd/Chemipure: 12 Chemi-Pure Blue nano, treats nano tanks for a 1 month (1 year supply). $45.26 value. Four chances to win!!!

    - One $100 livestock gift certificate and two $50 livestock gift certificates donated by Blue Ribbon Koi (so three chances to win)!

    - One Aussie Torch Coral donated by Vibrant Corals ($150-$200 value)

    - Clarisea SK-5000 automatic roller filter donated by Aquahaus! ($445 value!)

     

    More to be announced.

     

    Sponsors on-site (updated as needed):

    Reef Nerd

    Dr Mac's Pacific East Aquaculture

    AquaHaus


    Members selling on site (updated as needed):

    @copps

    @gws3 (pre-sales pickup)

    @ECreefer

    @Mr.Chalice

    @Readetome


    Watch this space for more information to be made available as it arrives!

  3.  

    We're so proud of WAMAS Membership Director, Nikki "ReefdUp" Bridges, speaking now for the first time at the Marine Aquarium Conference of North America!

    14b03dc6353c85a085b19d025ea3b57d.jpg

     

    Sent from my SM-N976V using Tapatalk

     

     

     

  4. Where is the tank located? Fifteen or twenty years ago, the Durso and Stockman standpipes were among the quieter drains. However, they still made a bit of noise that could be distracting in some home locations. A quieter option is what's now known as the BeanAnimal overflow configuration that requires three drain lines: One in constant siphon (silent), another that's a trickle drain, and an emergency/backup drain.

  5. Forrest, there's an old mesh-mod that was done on some old CPR-like skimmers back in the day to make them better at creating a finer bubble stream. 

     

    At 29 gallons, have you considered managing nutrients with weekly water changes? You may not need a skimmer on a tank that small.

  6. 1 hour ago, SkiCurtis said:

    I would like to set up a small frag tank as well.

    I did let DR.MAC (Pasfic east Aquaculture) know he was being requested at this meeting.

    Curtis

    Replied via PM. You're welcome to bring a small tank. See the PM for groundrules/expectations, Curtis. 

     

    We'd love to see Dr. Mac. Hilary tried reaching out but I don't believe that he replied.

  7. 8 hours ago, Breezie said:

    As an update, I went to ReefEscape in Fairfax and picked up some really nice live rock.  I had a minicycle, and all seems well now. Fish, nem and inverts are all happy and healthy.

     

    Nice! Thanks for sharing. ReefEscape is a long, long-time WAMAS sponsor and their staff is top notch.

  8. Also here in the Washington Post.

     

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2022/08/04/great-barrier-reef-coral-recovery-climate-change/

     

    However, note that the improvement is being seen in the northern and central parts of the reef. It looks like the south end is still losing coral cover. While we welcome the good news, with four mass bleaching events in just six years, we know that things can turn around quickly. It's a precarious situation.

  9. I'd be cautious using it. If it's synthetic lava rock (made for commercial purposes), it may have additives that may leach and be toxic to your tank. However, a lot of natural lava rock is safe. However, you may have difficulty keeping it submerged because of trapped air in the rock.

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