How to remove a snowflake eel

in this picture, he's maybe 30"
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and here he is again sever years later. He wouldn't fit in a bottle.
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in this picture, he's maybe 30"
GwE3uxLl.jpg


and here he is again sever years later. He wouldn't fit in a bottle.
NgvndI3l.jpg

You know, that image right there is why I will probably never own a eel ;) I've always wanted a small one in my reef. Had the urge many a time now. This right here I need to print and post it near my tank has a reminder. That and of course a 14 footer I once saw while diving.

Of course I know the lads snowflake is much smaller but still :) Anyway to the OP. Just wait it out. Rome wasn't built in a day they say. You have plenty of time and it will be out before you know it.
 
It might help to poke some small holes in the bottle. That will allow a bit of flow through the bottle which will help the smell from the bait lure it in better.
 
How to remove a snowflake eel

Thanks for all the suggestions I guess I will keep trying. Last night the eel had enough of the foxface guarding his cave and snapped at him luckily no bite. The foxface swam off and the eel went cruising around the whole tank causing all the other fish to move to opposite end of the tank that the eel was at. And wow what a magnificent eel with the blue eyes. I like the picture of the two cleaner shrimp cleaning the giant eel. I am also glad my eel should max out around two feet at least not that big I am also glad I didn't get a white mouth moray instead of this little guy.I guess I will keep trying with the bottle. I can't really drain the tank because cannot hold all the water. I will try making some holes so the smell can get out. Perhaps he doesn't even realize food is the bottle. Well Amy way thanks for all the help and suggestions. Will keep updating on him thanks again.


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How to remove a snowflake eel

So update on the eel. He is still avoiding bottle no matter what I do. He keeps coming out and trying to hunt the fish it seems. He will swim by and snap at them and keep swimming. Me and the fish have had it with him. I think I might try the hook tommorow before he actually catches one of the fish.
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Here is my foxface making sure the eel does not cause any more trouble. He is kind of the like the sherif of the tank it seems.


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Ok so if I were to use a hook from what I have read and gathered I want to find the smallest hook possible get rid of the barb and put a price of shrimp on. When the eel fully bites it yank it up with him on it. Is this correct?


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Do you have enough storage for all your water?
If so drain your whole tank down to sand level and dig a few shallow spots in the sand by its burrow. Then refill the tank.

+1

Had to do this to catch a 6 line wrasse a year ago.

Back in the day, when we still used undergravel filters, I had a snowflake swim down one of lift tubes and make his way into the plastic under gravel trays. Could see him in there for several days looking up from the bottom. He was good and stuck. Only way to get him out was ... remove every animal, remove all the rocks, remove all the sand, remove the plastic tray. That was a big, all day, deal.

In the 15 years I had him, he got free a few times. Found him once 25 feet from the tank, almost to the front door. Dry and covered in hair. Gave him a quick rinse and back in the tank he went. All was well. Another time, the cat played with him when he went 'a walking' and he had a few sores. Still just fine.

Lost him after 15 years when he made it out one last time, and we were gone for few days...

Sad as he'd often come to the surface and let me hand feed him (perhaps that might work for you - shrimp in hand, net in another.)

Peace
 
How to remove a snowflake eel

Thanks for suggestion sounds like it was a very interesting snowflake. I have also tried with food in one hand and net in the other that has not worked either. He recognizes the net and whenever he sees it he backs into a cave which is the tricky part.

It seems that eels live a lot longer then what the expected life is. I don't know if it is just a coincidence but I have been reading eels living to 30 and 20 years and 10 years while live aquaria and most sites say 4 years pretty large difference.

Well anyway I might need to drain it as much as I hate to do so. But will keep trying with bottle and maybe hook. May I ask how big did your snowflake reach? The max size at most fish sellers says two feet but yet I have seen multiple snowflakes 3ft long. Thanks


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Well final update eel is still in tank trap not working so I took it out he has taken no interest in it. I might try the hook method or move rocks around and bet him I don't know yet. Thanks for all the help and support will notify if I ever catch him. Thanks

Blizzard


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If it was me I'd just leave it in there and don't feed the tank for a few days. Target feed the fish if you need to although they will be fine. Patience is really key here. If you truly can't wait it out then just make it easier on you and the tank and start draining it and remove it by force.

No middle of the road here. Either all in and evict by force or use the trap and wait it out.
 
Thanks for suggestion sounds like it was a very interesting snowflake. I have also tried with food in one hand and net in the other that has not worked either. He recognizes the net and whenever he sees it he backs into a cave which is the tricky part.

It seems that eels live a lot longer then what the expected life is. I don't know if it is just a coincidence but I have been reading eels living to 30 and 20 years and 10 years while live aquaria and most sites say 4 years pretty large difference.

Well anyway I might need to drain it as much as I hate to do so. But will keep trying with bottle and maybe hook. May I ask how big did your snowflake reach? The max size at most fish sellers says two feet but yet I have seen multiple snowflakes 3ft long. Thanks


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I remember my eel purchase was in 1989, one of the first additions to my first salt tank (then a 45g Hex). He was pencil sized then and grew to be about 25-30 inches long maybe a little longer when I lost him in 2005. I think he would have lived another decade if I could have secured the last small portion of the top from where he escaped. This is the last picture I have of him in a 48 inch wide tank (cruddy photo is all I could get in 2001 with the first gen digital cameras). If I was going to go fish only again, or had a large reef with no shrimp/crabs a snowflake would be near the top of my list

He didn't eat many (if any) of my smaller fish... Even after he got huge. The small ones kept their distance and I kept him fed with shrimp / squid every couple weeks. Pretty tame as far as eels go, mostly blind, and not a good hunter. Your foxface will police him from harassing you smaller fish, I'd think, and there's no chance your fox will get eaten (mouth size).

Good luck transferring yours. I think you got plenty of time. Peace
 

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How to remove a snowflake eel

Thanks sailplanes yeah it seems eels do get larger and live a lot longer then most fish sellers say they do. Yes I still have time before becomes big enough to do too much harm. And the foxface policing him I think he will be ok in my tank for awhile until I can figure out how to catch him. Wow that eel looks big makes the whole tank seem smaller when he swims around worry's me if I can't get him out before he gets that big. Well Thanks again for the help and suggestions.


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Thanks saf1 I guess it can't hurt to leave the trap in. It just seems like he would never go in it or he knows it is a trap. I really don't want to drain and catch him so I guess patience is my only option. The thing is when I don't feed him for a couple nights he starts to hunt and stalk smaller fish. He is very spoiled. Well any way I will keep trying and update if I ever catch him. Thanks for all the help.


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If the eel has a rock it hides in normally I would see if you can chase it into the rock and remove the rock.
 
Yeah he has a rock but lives under it unfortunately. Another issue I need him out for can and probably will cause rock to topple over as he burrows under it. Thanks for suggestions I wish I listened when others advised against a eel in my tank. Oh well.


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I don't think your bottle is a good choice. a larger smart water bottle or Gatorade bottle or a 2L bottle trap is a better choice. the stronger firmer bottles work better. patience, it has only been a week. :)
 
How to remove a snowflake eel

Ok so the bottle should be changed? To a smaller size but stronger one? Ok I will do that will also take up less room in tank thanks. Will also keep trying on average how long does this take? I really don't like having this big bottle with a string in the middle of the tank. Thanks


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Ok so the bottle should be changed? To a smaller size but stronger one? Ok I will do that will also take up less room in tank thanks. Will also keep trying on average how long does this take? I really don't like having this big bottle with a string in the middle of the tank. Thanks


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A larger bottle. In my first comment, I had suggested a 2 liter soda bottle. Those are much larger than what you are using. You need to use a big bottle. It will take however long it takes for the eel to feel comfortable with the bottle. You could wrap part of it in vinyl so it looks like a cave to him. That might help.
 
Ok I see my bottle is 2 litters might not seem so in picture thought. I guess I will try with vinyl cover perhaps so he gets used to it sooner. Thanks for help and suggestions I was a little confused.


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Draining the tank might be your best option. It's a 90 gallon right? Kind of a D move, but buy 2-3 Brute trash cans from Home Depot. Drain the water. Catch it and fill it back up. Return the trash cans. Dig the sand out near it's hole is it'll swim down to water and also a few other holes in the opposite side for the other fish.
 
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