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#1 |
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My little air hole is just above the water level instead of just below it. Salt has a way of creeping pretty far. I see what you mean about the sump backflow. If you had a 5 gal sump and 4 -5 gal could backflow you could never have enough water in the sump without it overflowing when the power went off.
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#2 |
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Is there anyone on the Toledo area that can pick up a fish for me and meet me in lansing or somewhere in between? Ill buy the beer and make it worth thier while. send me a pm if you can.
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#3 |
formerly sergeant smoky
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P.S. I got a better water tester kit and found my ammonia and nitrates / nitrites were high. I did a 1/3 water change and added stress enzyme. Fred looks better and is more active now, and is eating better. I also got the salinity to 1.018, as per recomendations. I think that is better so that I can place feeder fish in the tank and they will live until he gets hungry.
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#4 | |
Gramps 4x's
![]() Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Horatio Seymore Hiny
Location: Boca Raton - North of La Habana
Posts: 8,774
Trading: (8)
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Don't feed him feeder fish, specially if fresh water as some folks do. That is not part of their diet. Eels by large part eat shrimp, clams, etc in that family. While he may be eating other stuff (heck, mine eats the regular food I feed the fish - granules that you see in the photo I just posted of my tank), it is not necessarily good for them or the tank. Feeder fish and things like silver fish are bad for the water chemistry, specially in a 75 gallon system or smaller that has less tolerance for variance. Some eels like a zebra moray will starve before they even dare try to eat a live fish. They are not designed for that. Get in the habit of feeding him once to three times a week, depending on how he looks as far as seeking out food. The more you feed an eel, the more he will grow. The less you feed, the longer he takes to grow. Place a shrimp piece on a feeding stick for eels and control what goes in the tank so to limit waste.
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Little known fact: I am a former member of the Village People - The Indian |
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#6 | |
Gramps 4x's
![]() Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Horatio Seymore Hiny
Location: Boca Raton - North of La Habana
Posts: 8,774
Trading: (8)
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It kills any parasites they may bring that may affect the tank. I then thaw them in a cup with water, split it and drop the half shell with the claim in the tank. Once he is done, scoop out the shell. If he doesn't like it, get it out of there. He will go nuts for it as he also will for shrimp. I take a medium to large shrimp and cut it into about three pieces (for the size of my eel). I then feed him the pieces on a feeding stick. Mine goes through about 5 shrimp on average, about two times a week.
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Little known fact: I am a former member of the Village People - The Indian |
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#7 |
Gramps 4x's
![]() Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Horatio Seymore Hiny
Location: Boca Raton - North of La Habana
Posts: 8,774
Trading: (8)
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In the case of my tank, the center brace is a somewhat of a support but I stil managed to build it with ballroom dancing space. Both sets of doors on both sides swing completely open with nothing to obstruct.
My filtration is more like what your wet dry will look than the one I did for my customer. Mine is 12 yrs old and I did it much simpler than, before I got into the complicated plumbing. I have been updating it here and there through the years but never splurged on a new custom built wet dry as I did for customers. To give you an idea, that is a 72" long furniture and that wet dry is 36" long. Note the tape and arrow BC-Axeman was referring to. ![]() ![]()
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Little known fact: I am a former member of the Village People - The Indian |
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