Here are pics of Dave's anemones. They arrived at 0945 and were acclimated to temp by floating in the sump for 30 minutes. Acclimation water parameter acclimation began at 1030.
They were both packaged very well triple bags on the blue, 4 bags on the green.
The blue one was upside and down and floating in the bag on arrival. When the bag was opened, the mouth was gaping open and everted to approx 3 inches in diameter. The water was cloudy and the anemone appeared to have reguritated several items up from a previous feeding. Once in the bucket the anemone immediately tightened up the mouth. This picture was taken less than 3 minutes after being placed in the bucket.
The green one was in perfect health and looked only to be mildly inconvienenced by the whole shipping thing... Water was clear, and there was no reguritation. I took a picture of the anemone in teh acclimation bucket as well, but it turned out badly....
The green one was sticky right out of the bag. Interestingly enough, there was a small rock the anemone was attached to in the bag. IMO, this was a good thing for two reasons:
1...obviously, the anemone attached to it while in Dr Mac's care, and rather than stress the anemone out and possibly tear the foot by removing it from the rock, they just shipped the whole thing, (this is the most logical reason for the 4 bags on this anemone)
2...This gave the anemone something to attach to during the shipping which may very well have reduced stress on the anemone...I dunno, I'm not an anemone psychologist, this is just conjecture on my part.
Due to the blue one being distressed, we did a fairly quick drip feed from the main tank to the bucket the anemone was in. Every 10 minutes or so, water from the bucket was removed. Salinity for the two anemones shipping water was 1.027. Dave's reef is kept at 1.025. After 2.5 hours, the water in the bucket with the blue Gigantea was at 1.025, so the anemone was transferred over to the tank.
The anemone was not sticky while in the bucket. It was responsive, and its tentacles were writhing, but it was not sticky.
The bucket was drained almost completely of water and detritus, and the whole bucket was lowered in to Dave's tank, and water from the tank was allowed to wash over the anemone. The anemone was not directly exposed to air at all.
The anemone had attached to the bottom of the bucket while acclimating. I slowly peeled it off, being very careful not damage the foot. Once the anemone was free of the bucket, I lowered towards the bottom of the tank. Oddly enough, the anemone immediately got sticky when it was peeled from the bucket. It attached immediately to my hand and required several minutes to decide to let go.
Nick