Thursday, April 24, 2008

Auction at MARS!

Hello everyone. It seems like I'm even more busy here in the US than I was back in Indonesia. Just getting a breather to post this thread.

As mentioned before on Saturday the 19th, I joined Steve Tyree and John from "Yourreef.com" to auction off some corals. The event was being held in Sacramento (about 2 hours away from SF) at a conference room at a Round Table Pizza restaurant. It was sponsored by a local reef club called MARS (marine aquarists roundtable of Sacramento).


It was a small crowd, not quite the number of people that was expected. Of course this was the first time the club had an auction like this so I'm sure it will be a bigger event next time around. Nevertheless, it was exciting!

So this is American pizza! To the Indonesian reefers, this is what real pizza should look like, not the funky tasting pizza from Pizza Hut Indonesia. Being a primarily a Muslim country, no pepperoni can be found (made from pork), so beef hot dogs are used. You can imagine the funky taste.

I would have dreamed of this when I was in Indo. This one looked like a combination pizza!

Some members enjoying pizza before the auction.

And here he is, the famous Steve Tyree! The cool guy on the right is me.

Besides me and Steve, John from "your reef" also had frags for the auction. John runs an lfs in Roseville (near Sacramento) and also sells online (yourreef.com). He is pictured here on the right. The lady in the center is my old customer from the Tropical Paradise. Her name is Pam and she is heavily involved with the club activities. I remember a huge frag swap that was held at her home back a few years ago. I loaded up my truck with all sorts of corals and salt and sold a bunch of stuff at the swap meet. It was alot of fun back in the days.

And here is Brian, the president of the club going over the list of corals for the auction.

Most of the frags are from Steve and John. The larger sps and lps pieces are from me. Needleless to say, all the pieces for the auction were sold!

And here is Brian auctioning the corals while Steve looks on.

This cute little baby girl is the daughter of Mark, one of the members. She seems to happy being hugged by my wife.

Overall, the auction went well. It was good to have met up with Steve and some of my old customers. Being at an event like this really made me miss my old retail days at Tropical Paradise!

In a few days, I will post some pictures of my road trip to Monterey California. From strawberry fields to a flat tire to one of my old friend/customer to the Monterey Bay Aquarium, it was a memorable day!

cheers,
Eddie

Monday, April 21, 2008

Hi guys!

Hi guys. Just been too busy to do any posts lately. I will be going to visit a friend in Monterey tomorrow and she has a huge reef tank! I'll post pictures of her tank as well as pictures from the MARS auction when I return. I will be also visiting the famous Monterey Bay Aquarium as well. I haven't been there in 7 years! Of course, I will be sharing pictures with all of you as well.

cheers,
Eddie

Friday, April 18, 2008

Back at Home!

Hello everyone. After a hectic final of week of shipments, I made it back home. The funny thing is that I packed the corals for the US on Tuesday and Wednesday. Then flew in on Wednesday night to SF and met up with my friend and customer to open up the shipments. It was good to observe the conditions of the corals upon arrival. This is the best way to make adjustments for a better shipment.

So being the creative cool guy that I am, I made a simple little video of some of our corals. I used my camera and not bad for the first time. My friend Ferry uploaded it for me, as I don't know how to do such technical things!

As some of you already know, I will be joining Steve Tyree at the Sacramento MARS club on Saturday to auction off some corals. Here is a list of the corals that I will be bringing. Keep in mind that not all of these corals will be for the auction. A few will be for Steve and one of the wild acro colonies will be fragged and donated to the members.

Please keep in mind that these pictures were taken in Bali. They have lost some of their colors due to stress from shipping.
A cool piece of wild acropora carduus - eddie's elite edition "autumn's delight. The colors on these acros are normally dull brown, but a few of them will have this green and purple colors. A deepwater acro that does well under halides.

If you guessed acropora lokani, you are right! Color this baby up to a dark purple and you will have "eddie's purple monster". Under actinics, you can actually see a little green, definitely a collector's piece!

A killer piece of raspberry purple tipped acropora millepora. Finally I tracked down a wild piece. Normally, I see little frags of these on aquacultured cement bases. They are a hot item and this color morph is definitely not common. This one is the eee "raspberry plum".

An acropora gomezi. The actual piece looks better than this photograph. This coral comes in this turquoise to purple to dark blue color. Another great acro from Northern Bali! We can call this one eee "Bali turquoise tort".

Here is a very rare piece of a wild gomezi. This piece is insane under halides!

A large piece of an aquacultured granulosa! I call this acro purple passion and is a good candidate for frags for the club members. We will see.

A beautiful little wild colony of an acropora loripes. It sports green blue body with blue tips. A purple version is called the "spring flower". We can call this one "summer flower"!

One of my favorites, the raspberry tort as I like to call it. It is also a gomezi type of acro. A very nice acropora that colors up nicely.

Very cool little zoanthids! I've seen these exact ones sell for big bucks online!

Sorry for the bad picture. The coral I'm trying to show is the little chalice on the right. Such names as "mummy eyes" have been given to this coral.

Of course I will be bringing a few of these acan max's! This one has three heads and is totally awesome. Must see in person!

Another cool acan max.

This max glows under the actinics like crazy! I hope you guys can see it under the blue lights. This is a very rare moprh, definitely a collector's piece.

One more nice piece. I've seen it under halides and it is a killer piece!

I will also be bringing a red yuma, an ultra blastomussa, and a rare raspberry red fungia!

That is all. I will post pictures of the activities with Steve and the MARS club after Saturday.

cheers,
Eddie

Monday, April 14, 2008

New Corals Video Showcase

Hey guys, I'm vortextubes here, Eddie's friends who was supposed to post up some pictures while he was away to Makassar last week. I'm sorry to tell you but I got hit with DENGUE FEVER! Yup, that's right, another case of dengue fever just hit your fellow blogger.... Ha ha ha....

But anyway, I got off from the hospital two days ago and I'm here to tell you that Eddie should be back blogging in a couple of days. He's still busy shipping some corals and packing cos he's going back to the States for a few weeks.

A word of warning to you all-would-be-travellers to Southeast Asia, please always bring your anti-mosquito spray and your Tylenol for the fever as noted here.

As you probably have noticed, I put up a video of our holding facility showcasing the latest corals that Eddie got from his last trip to Makassar at the bottom of this blog. Enjoy!

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Northern Bali!

Hi guys. First of all, I want to apologize for the pictures that was not posted. It was supposed to have been, but I'm not sure what happened. I just returned to Bali from Sulawessi after coral hunting. The corals will be shipped to Jakarta over the weekend, and I will be there to receive on Saturday. I can post pictures of my finds early next week. As usual, I found some awesome stuff!

I'd like to welcome Steve Tyree to my blog. Steve is the pioneer of aquaculturing acroporas and montiporas. He was growing these things when we were still trying to figure out how to keep them from turning brown! He is famous world wide for his collection of limited edition corals. A few of my pieces are in his collection. I have added a link to his website on my favorites. For all the sps reefers around the world that are looking at my blog, you guys should go check it out, you will learn a thing or two.

I also would like to welcome members from the MARS reef club. I'm sure the old members will remember me from the days of Tropical Paradise. I will be joining Steve Tyree to auction off some corals. More on this event at a later post.

The following pictures are from my last trip to Northern Bali for aquacultured acros.

Off the main highway, we took this tiny dirt road to get to the beach. On both sides were corn fields and chili pepper plantations. This was real backroads of Northern Bali.

We ended up in a clearing near the ocean. We drove through the mud and came across these little cottages. They look like they have been abandoned for quite some time. I can picture backpackers staying in these kind of places. Kind of creepy to me!

Here I am at the beach, waiting for the boat to come to take me to the floating platform to pick out the aquacultured acros. My wife always complains to me that I don't post enough pictures of myself on my blog. She just misses me because she is in the States while I'm here. So here you go honey, I will see you next week!

Some local kids giggling and trying to speak English to me. The kids are always curious and seem to want to talk to me. At least they know "hi", and sometimes, "how are you?" I wished I had some candy for them.

I'm not sure what this is, but I can tell you that these same things, built over water, in Vietnam are called toilets! There is a good chance that it is one of them.

Can't make out clearly the plants growing on the sand, but they are ice plants. This is the first time I've seen ice plants in the tropics. It reminded me of back at home in the SF area. The shorelines of the SF bay has lots of ice plants.

Check this out. Cactus growing on the beach. I always thought they only grew in the dessert. I wonder if those red things growing out are edible? They look like some sort of cactus fruit.

After an hour of waiting, the boat showed up. I was expecting a little bigger one and not so ghetto!

Ok, so I was thinking that there is no way that this little motor would ever run. It looked like old junk that has been sitting outside for a long time.

We hopped on with a styrofoam box and the captain used this little thin rope to start the engine. On the third try, it started turning! Wow!!

It was quite noisy for a little fellow, but it would do the job. Believe it or not, this thing was pretty fast. But again, the boat was the size of a bathtub.

Everything about the motor was ghetto rigged. Rope was used to hold everything down. Since the motor was fixed, the captain had to hold the rod part of the motor down in the water while steering the boat with wooden rudder. I was impressed! Note the small bottle of gas hanging on the beam above the motor. It reminded me of when I was in the hospital with Dengue fever and the IV drip.

Talk about being creative. Check out this fin. The guy actually sewed a rubber shoe to it! Pretty cool! For me, I would just go buy a new one with straps. But again the locals don't have much money to have such luxuries. They work with what they have, and if it breaks, then they find a way to fix it - or rig it!

Check out this pile of aquaculture plugs in the boat. These are cement based hand made pieces. Some plugs use a mold, but these are made piece by piece. My first experimental ones in Tonga looked like these.

A close up look and you can see the small pebbles that was used in the mix. Sometimes a dye is used to color the plugs to look like coralline algae. I know in Fiji, a dye is used to color artificial liverock.

We got to the floating platform and a diver was already there collecting samples for me to look at. Some of the deepwater acros are grown on the bottom of the reef.

These guys know that I like purple and blue. Here I am checking out the samples that the diver had brought up. If there are certain species I like, I ask to get more pieces for me to choose from. Kind of fun!

Some of the other coral species are grown on these racks that hang down from the platforms.

Upon returning to the beach after getting my corals, I noticed this fisherman getting off of a tiny boat. He didn't have a motor but paddled. I caught up to him and I pointed at his bag.

He was catching ornamental fish for the aquarium trade. I thought he was a food fisherman. The good thing is that I didn't see any cyanide squirt bottles. He had a small barrier net and a scooper net. He was a net catching fisherman for sure. A really good sign that the reefs around this area were in good shape.

He had mostly damsel fish.

Another bag of damsels that he is proudly showing. Much of the local fisherman who don't have expensive equipment, like big boats or compressors, rely on catching these shallow water bread and butter fish for a living. It is sad to see this kind of situation. But there is little choice in what they do. This guys will probably get less than a dollar for all of his fish, but it may be enough to feed him or his family. A true reality check of how things are in the third world, and how lucky I am to have lived in the US all of my life.

Let's finish off the thread, with some pictures of corals from recent shipments.

Ok this is got to be one of the most unique pieces of a fungia I've ever seen!
I passed it up the first time thinking that it had been damaged during the boat ride from one of the islands. But a closer look reveals that the white pattern is symetrical. The tissue is lacking the zoxanthellae precisely where the white pattern is. How is this possible? Nature works in mysterious ways for sure!

Check out this beautiful liverock. A customer have requested large pieces for a giant reef system. Each one of these rocks will fit in one box and weigh up to 25 kilos (55 lbs).

Some of the nicest chalice type of corals come from Indonesia. This piece of echinophyllia was slightly damaged during shipping. The edges always stresses but recovers quickly. Sometimes, the edges turn into real nice colors, like the watermelon chalice does. I used to ship out crazy pieces from Tonga back in the days.

Another gorgeous piece. This one has small orange eyes. Only time will tell what color it will turn into under artificial lighting. These can easily turn into a limited edition piece quickly.

Never mind the blue palys, notice the peach with green center paly in the middle? A killer piece. I found only a small patch of it on this rock among hundreds of colonies. Some lucky reefer will end up with it.


A deepwater lobophyllia. This coral is insane! I just had a chance to see it under t5 actinics in Makassar. One of my friends has a developing reef tank and had just put one of these beauties in. I couldn't believe my eyes! I knew they were beautiful, but it really impressed me. I can just imagine what colors it will turn into under artificial lighting in the long run.

My friend Johan has a very impressive tank. The reef is just getting started
and he has documented everything from the first step. You should go take a look at his thread and check out the equipment he is using. The rockwork is also very impressive. Here is the link:

http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?threadid=
1081302&goto=newpost

I'm taking off to Northern Bali again to look for some cool pieces to bring to the MARS reef club auction in about five hours. We will leave again at 4 am as usual. If I get back early enough, I will post again with my findings.

cheers,
Eddie

Aquaculture Northern Bali

November Corals Collection Part. 1

November Corals Collection Part. 2

Aquaculture - November Shipment

Coral Showcase - September 2008 Inventory

Holding Facility's Corals Collection Showcase 2007