Moving reef life long distance.

Catharsis70

New member
I am currently faced with a possible long distance move (1800miles) . The trip would be made by road as My dog cannot handle flying (lucky me) I would have the luxury of another tank being filled with water and ready to go on arrival but how long will fish, corals, live rock and sand survive in a styro? The plan would be to have several gallons of matched salt water along to do partial water changes a few times a day. The trip would take about 3 days if all goes well. Any tips, hints or experience out there? Should I just sell it all of and start all over again?
 
Everything would survive more than likely. The fish would be the most worried about with stress on driving. Noise and vibrations. Any coral should be ok for lil bit without light. But you need to have a way to get something going for them fast once you get there.
 
DJ88
Thanks for moving to the right forum.

fishgeeksrus
I have family on the other end of the trip that I could ship them too but I have little faith in the shipping companies and would like to have them be in my hands for the trip.

NCreefwannabe
I am thinking of only taking the live rock and coral. Probably give away the fish localy or something. the rock, coral and live sand are the expensive parts that I want to try to keep.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=6881189#post6881189 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by landscapen
55 gallon trash cans new of corse with a small inverter for heater or power heads ?


Hey! now thats an idea! I was shopping inverters for my sons PS2 and it never crossed my mind.
 
if packaged properly, and purged (no more poop inside of them) A healthy fish can last up to 4 days in a bag (if the O2 does not run low) However this depends entirely on the fish. What fish do you have?? The trash barrel and power head idea would work best. Unless you can get a small O2 tank and bring it with you on the trip and change the O2 and water every 12 hours or so, they can last an easy 3 days. (i've done this with a supermale flame wrasse, female bluethroat, yellow tang, sm naso tang, and a chevron)

Get battery powered air bubblers - they are your friends on long trips :)
 
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