moving 7 hours away - sell or take with me

Coffeeinbed

New member
Hi all,

I may be moving 7 hours away - should I sell or try and take the corals and fish? Is that too far for tangs/corals? Everything should fit in a couple 30G trash cans.

I'll have a chance to set up the new tank at the new house - I'm not rushed. Should I just sell ....or?

Thanks
 
If they are at the right temp the whole trip i see no reason they couldn't survive. I mean, they survive being shipped in those bags. Can't imagine a car ride would be worse.
 
Thanks for the input fellas, it matters.

I hate the idea of "starting over", I have certain things the way I want them.

thanks
 
I made the 22 hour trip over two days from GA to NH without any casualties. Couple buckets, solar air pump, and a plan to get everything set up when I got there.
 
I just made a post in a similar forum of my experience moving 6 hours away...

I moved a 65 gallon reef 6 hours away just using 5 gallon buckets and stirofoam coolers. It work very well.

First step, take lots of pics!

Next, all the senitive live stock (Fish and inverts) was bagged and kept in the coolers. Remove the water you will need for bagging first in case you have to distrupt rock and sand. You want the water for bagging to be clean.

I separated the live rock between pieces that had corals attached and those that did not. Put the pieces without corals in the buckets first, then wedge pieces with coral close to the top to prevent damage. I used chunks of stirofoam to wedge between them to help keep them stationary. Fill the buckets with just enough water to cover. The most difficult coral for me to move was a large orange cap monti that barely fit in a bucket on it's own. Only about 1 inch clearence around the diameter. I used stirofoam and wedged it around the attached rock and used partially filled bags of water around the coral base to limit sloshing.

All the sand (Carib crushed coral) went into one bucket with enough water to cover.

Things I learned...
1. Take pictures!
2. Premix water to replace dicarded water.
3. Label bags and buckets with it's contents.

I found 5 gallon buckets to be much easier to move than garbabe cans and it's easier to isolate rock.

Hope this helps.

Good luck!
 
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