mnchartier
Premium Member
So back on June 21st I picked up a blue Haddoni at the LFS that someone brought in. I stopped in a couple of times to see how it was doing before picking up. So when I get home with the Haddoni I am getting ready to acclimate it and this is how it looked in the bucket. It is very sticky and has great color, and also started to attach to the bucket.
I acclimated it for 45 minutes seeing that the parameters we not off by much. So I place it in the tank with all powerheads off. It attached in about 30-40 minutes but not in the sand it attached to the side of a rock with very little in the sand
After about an hour this is how the mouth was
The mouth has closed tight every now and then but has always had some protrusion. This is the worst that it looked.
The on Wednesday, I could see that it started to move a little and was detaching from the rock, I took this time to move it to the sand. I would say less then 1/4 was still attached to the rock and was fairly easy to remove the rest of the foot. I dug a hole and placed it in the hole with the pumps off and this is the result.
Colors a little different due to taking the camera off of auto.
The same day I saw it eating my hectors goby.
This is where I am today with it.
So far I have been doing a 20% water change every 2-3 days and fresh carbon with each water change.
Parameters
KH - 9.5
Ca - 410
Mag - 1400
Nitrite/Ammonia - 0
Phos/Nitrate - undetected on API tests but I have a few small patches of HA but nothing huge
I acclimated it for 45 minutes seeing that the parameters we not off by much. So I place it in the tank with all powerheads off. It attached in about 30-40 minutes but not in the sand it attached to the side of a rock with very little in the sand
After about an hour this is how the mouth was
The mouth has closed tight every now and then but has always had some protrusion. This is the worst that it looked.
The on Wednesday, I could see that it started to move a little and was detaching from the rock, I took this time to move it to the sand. I would say less then 1/4 was still attached to the rock and was fairly easy to remove the rest of the foot. I dug a hole and placed it in the hole with the pumps off and this is the result.
Colors a little different due to taking the camera off of auto.
The same day I saw it eating my hectors goby.
This is where I am today with it.
So far I have been doing a 20% water change every 2-3 days and fresh carbon with each water change.
Parameters
KH - 9.5
Ca - 410
Mag - 1400
Nitrite/Ammonia - 0
Phos/Nitrate - undetected on API tests but I have a few small patches of HA but nothing huge