Thank you. It is the same thing I've read over and over again. It seems as if it's almost a whole seperate hobby. I am definitely not interested in taking on something so fragile and time hungry at the moment.I would probably avoid most if not all of them at this point. Gorgs need constant feeding and really specific feeding needs, most people who have success with them feed pretty much every hour with a complicated dosing setup (for the non-photosynthetic ones). They also have flow needs that are almost as high or more than SPS. Sun corals, dendros, rhyzos, spiralis gorg and the ones with bigger "mouths" need to be fed daily with target feeding. This can be difficult as some of them only open at night. I have had a dendro for three years that is doing well but I feed it every day. I got my first sun coral and have had it for a few months and it only opens generally after I feed which means I have to keep more food around to feed after it opens. Also cleaner shrimp and clean up crew love to try and steal food from them. My spiralis I have had for 2 years and again I feed it daily. Obviously the increased feeding can lead to higher nutrients which you have to take care of with water changes or increased mechanical filtration.
There are some photosynthetic gorgs out of the caribean that people have success with, they just need the increased flow not the heavy nutrient regime.
There is another guy I know of (not on the board but I see him all the time at my local LFS) who has an amazing gorg/NPS tank but his secret is he keeps small sharks and rays in there which produce huge amounts of waste which feed his gorgs. He is one of the few people I have even read about who can keep and grow some species of gorgs.
Just to show I am not fear mongering, here is a guy who won tank of the month with his NPS system and to show how he keeps it up.
http://reefkeeping.com/joomla/index.php/current-issue/article/86-tank-of-the-month