- Joined
- Mar 28, 2009
- Messages
- 1,210
- Reaction score
- 1,027
I though it might be helpful to post a few notes about Heat Pack/ Cold Pack usage that I took down from a very well respected seller on R2R that ships out lots of acropora.
This info may be elsewhere but I did not see it.
Comments I recieving regarding heat packs:
1. If the lows are above the mid 50s and the highs are in the 70s I usually skip the heat pack.
2. I ship UPS, most of the UPS system is indoors, so they do not need additional heat in that situation
3. I have received Acropora in water down to 58F that had zero issues acclimating and growing. Honestly I think the cooler temps help them last longer in the bag by slowing metabolism.
3. If the water temps get much above the mid to upper 70s I start seeing stressed frags and have losses. Heat is much more deadly than cold.
Comments regarding cold packs:
1. If night temps are above 70 and day temps are mid 80s or higher I try not to ship
2. I've never shipped with a cool pack, it doesn't have enough lasting cooling capacity to maintain temp like the chemical reaction in a heat pack.
3. I would not be comfortable shipping with one (cold pack) without doing some experimentation and measuring temps in a test box first.
LPS and zoas tend to be hardier, and will likely tolerate variation in temp during shipping better.
Hth
This info may be elsewhere but I did not see it.
Comments I recieving regarding heat packs:
1. If the lows are above the mid 50s and the highs are in the 70s I usually skip the heat pack.
2. I ship UPS, most of the UPS system is indoors, so they do not need additional heat in that situation
3. I have received Acropora in water down to 58F that had zero issues acclimating and growing. Honestly I think the cooler temps help them last longer in the bag by slowing metabolism.
3. If the water temps get much above the mid to upper 70s I start seeing stressed frags and have losses. Heat is much more deadly than cold.
Comments regarding cold packs:
1. If night temps are above 70 and day temps are mid 80s or higher I try not to ship
2. I've never shipped with a cool pack, it doesn't have enough lasting cooling capacity to maintain temp like the chemical reaction in a heat pack.
3. I would not be comfortable shipping with one (cold pack) without doing some experimentation and measuring temps in a test box first.
LPS and zoas tend to be hardier, and will likely tolerate variation in temp during shipping better.
Hth