Cutting back coral to save others

Raising Reef.

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When corals grow into and on top of others you have to get involved to save the less aggressive ones.
If you put corals in the right place the risk is less but in a small tank eventually it’s inevitable they will touch.
 

Billdogg

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I prefer to let mine figure it out on their own. IMHO, it looks way more natural that way, but then my flower beds are pretty much that way as well.

jkAjDYrl.jpg
 
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Raising Reef.

Raising Reef.

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I prefer to let mine figure it out on their own. IMHO, it looks way more natural that way, but then my flower beds are pretty much that way as well.

jkAjDYrl.jpg

I agree to a point but when corals I like are being killed off I can’t help but intervene.
I don’t want my hole tank filled with nothing but the winner of the royal rumble.
 

Waters

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I prefer to let mine figure it out on their own. IMHO, it looks way more natural that way, but then my flower beds are pretty much that way as well.

jkAjDYrl.jpg
The only problem with that....at least in my case, is the less desirable coral always seems to take over.
 

Billdogg

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Don't get me wrong! The green Montipora in the foreground has been rather aggressively trimmed back countless times. Last time I used a hacksaw to remove a huge amount of it due to it's blocking flow and light to almost 1/2 of the tank. Another couple months and I'll be taming it yet again.
 

reeffreak911

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Usually trimming back means making money or gaining other corals in trading so defanately a good thing when I have to trim back
 
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Raising Reef.

Raising Reef.

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Usually trimming back means making money or gaining other corals in trading so defanately a good thing when I have to trim back

This is very true and I was very sad to have to discard the corals I clipped I have now cleared out my frag rack so next time I will have somewhere to put new frags.
 

vetteguy53081

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This is where popularity of fragging comes in. I don’t frag and initially space coral apart to alleviate this possibility of overrunning each other
 

reeffreak911

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This is where popularity of fragging comes in. I don’t frag and initially space coral apart to alleviate this possibility of overrunning each other
That's impossible even if you have a tank with two corals they are not gonna stop growing just cause you put them far apart it will take longer but eventually you'll have two corals that dont fit in that tank
 

vetteguy53081

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Impos
That's impossible even if you have a tank with two corals they are not gonna stop growing just cause you put them far apart it will take longer but eventually you'll have two corals that dont fit in that tank[/QUOTE

Impossible? At 10-12” , no and depends what coral we’re talking about. 31+ years and never had two collide- not impossible
 

vetteguy53081

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That's impossible even if you have a tank with two corals they are not gonna stop growing just cause you put them far apart it will take longer but eventually you'll have two corals that dont fit in that tank

Impossible? At 6-10” apart, -no and depends what coral we’re talking about. 31+ years and never had two collide- not impossible and who places 2 or 3 corals in a tank?
 

reeffreak911

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Impossible? At 6-10” apart, -no and depends what coral we’re talking about. 31+ years and never had two collide- not impossible and who places 2 or 3 corals in a tank?
Well If you paid attention it's a nano cube how far apart can you put corals so people have to by your standards of keeping this imaginary coral that doesnt grow
 

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