Can xxxl haddoni get out of large pvc coupling placed to the bottom glass on its own?

Tango451

New member
In attempts to get this very large haddoni to attach, I bought a large coupling (the diameter is pretty much the same as the foot - the foot may even get bigger when inflate).

I placed the coupling in the sand, pressed it to the bottom and took out the sand inside the coupling so the bottom glass was exposed. I placed the carpet vertically in the coupling (it's probably 4-6" high).

He looks alright, not the happiest but still in the pvc (mouth is a little
Inflated). A small corner of his foot is sticking out of the pvc. I brought sand as high as I could around the pvc coupling and placed rocks around it so the carpet could lay without having an imprint from the coupling.

------------My question is, can a haddoni get out of a pvc coupling 5-6" high and pretty much the same or smaller diameter than its foot that is flush to the bottom on its own if it wanted to, or should i try to detach him and get him out of the pvc?-----------
 
The small piece of his foot sticking out is the bottom of his foot*

After I put him in it last night. I realized today I should have tried to burry him again without the pvc because I am worried he might get stuck/ stressed**
 
the carpet will move anywhere it wants. PVC won't stop it. They can even bring down some rockscapes so be careful.

I usually just dig a hole in the sand next to the rocks. jam the foot under the rock crevice and wait for it to attach.
 
the carpet will move anywhere it wants. PVC won't stop it. They can even bring down some rockscapes so be careful.

I usually just dig a hole in the sand next to the rocks. jam the foot under the rock crevice and wait for it to attach.



+1 usually works for me there's a few odd cases that a haddons takes a long time to settle but they usually do just keep power heads and heaters covers to avoid burning the nem or turning it to soup until it's settled


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