Salt water warning!
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Salt water warning!
Hi! I just joined this forum, although I've been a member at landhermitcrabs.com for a few years now. As all the other members of LHC know, I like to test salt water in my hydrometer. I have tested Red Sea, Instant Ocean, Tropic Marin, Doc Wellfish, ZooMed Salt Water Conditioner Part 2, and Salt Water Glub. All of the salt mixes tested to be full-strength ocean water at a ratio of 1 1/2 teaspoons of salt to 1 cup of water (I actually mixed it at 2 tablespoons salt/1 quart water, but it's the same). Salt Water Glub is also full strength, so it's nice for those who prefer the convenience of pre-mixed, although I think it's terribly expensive. However, ZooMed Salt Water Conditioner Part 2 is WORTHLESS! It contains almost no salt, and has a lot of artificial coloring. In order to mix it to an acceptable salt level, you would have to use 5 teaspoons of mix to a cup of water, this is 5 times the recommended dosage. The water will be very yellow if you mix it this strong, probably not safe for the hermies. I believe the lack of salt in this product could be very dangerous for hermies, especially for Strawberry crabs. I noticed in reading past posts that it seems a lot of members on this forum use this brand for their salt water, I just wanted everyone to be informed so that no hermies will die unnecessarily.
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I'm glad to hear that salt water glub is good for hermit crabs. That's what I have been using because it comes mixed and everything so it saves me time. My E loves it and seems healthy, so I figured it must be good, but hearing for sure that it is good for them makes me feel better
Great job with the research on salt water!!!
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/003.gif)
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I didn't test them all at their specs, because a lot of them only had instructions for mixing large quantities (over 5 gallons). So I tried them all according to the Instant Ocean recommendations (as outlined by vckums).
I forgot, I also tested HBH Hermit Crab Salt. The mixing instuctions on the package recommend 1 teaspoon per cup of water, this tests too low, but if you mix it according to IO specs (1 1/2 tsp/cup water) it tests fine. It's a little cloudy, probably because it "contains extra calcium!" I thought the cloudiness would go away after a while, like the other salt mixes, but it was still cloudy after a week. The hermies didn't seem to mind, though.
MyHermies--I'm sure Oceanic is fine, too, but I haven't tested it yet. I have 35 crabbies, there's only so much salt mix I can go through, LOL. Maybe it'll be the next brand I try.
I forgot, I also tested HBH Hermit Crab Salt. The mixing instuctions on the package recommend 1 teaspoon per cup of water, this tests too low, but if you mix it according to IO specs (1 1/2 tsp/cup water) it tests fine. It's a little cloudy, probably because it "contains extra calcium!" I thought the cloudiness would go away after a while, like the other salt mixes, but it was still cloudy after a week. The hermies didn't seem to mind, though.
MyHermies--I'm sure Oceanic is fine, too, but I haven't tested it yet. I have 35 crabbies, there's only so much salt mix I can go through, LOL. Maybe it'll be the next brand I try.
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Willow, I love your sig!!
I use Oceanic for my hermies and always have. According to my reefkeeper friends at work, Oceanic is one of the closest to natural seawater, and I like to keep my specific gravity at 1.025 since that is what seawater is. I have found though that the Oceanic tends to test rather low. They say 1/2 per gallon for 1.021 but I have found that it does take more than that. I also add buffer to it to keep my pH at about 8.2 (again like seawater). My friend told me it has a lot of calcium in it as well so I dont add a calcium supplement.
I also use it in my saltwater tank and love it. Its also one of the least expensive brands.
I use Oceanic for my hermies and always have. According to my reefkeeper friends at work, Oceanic is one of the closest to natural seawater, and I like to keep my specific gravity at 1.025 since that is what seawater is. I have found though that the Oceanic tends to test rather low. They say 1/2 per gallon for 1.021 but I have found that it does take more than that. I also add buffer to it to keep my pH at about 8.2 (again like seawater). My friend told me it has a lot of calcium in it as well so I dont add a calcium supplement.
I also use it in my saltwater tank and love it. Its also one of the least expensive brands.
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I started out using that Zoo Med part 1 and 2 stuff (because ya figure if it's "for hermit crabs" it must be right, right? Not!) Anyway, the way it's described, I assumed it was a dechlorinator for your already-mixed saltwater, with some additional goodies (?) to justify paying for a whole separate thing. My point is, it's very confusing marketing to make the consumer think they need something, which is really nothing.
Incidentally, I emailed ZooMed to find out if the "drinking water conditioner part 1", which is a dechlorinator, also produces slime coat, AND IT DOES, although it doesn't say anything about it on the packaging. So there's another worthless product.
Incidentally, I emailed ZooMed to find out if the "drinking water conditioner part 1", which is a dechlorinator, also produces slime coat, AND IT DOES, although it doesn't say anything about it on the packaging. So there's another worthless product.