
I have given him plenty of natural shells. Is there a way I could possibly entice him to change shells?
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Always boil in fresh dechlorinated water and rise as well no salt water for shells.KDK241 wrote:Also if you don't rinse your shells in salt water try doing that and if you already do you can try re-rinsing them. I have had crabs pass up shells and then 2 days later I re-rinsed them and the same crabs decided to move on in.
What an apt image...and one that's going to stick in my mind for days now!mool wrote: but are sporting their too tight shells like a fat man in a Speedo.
I laughed harder than I should havemool wrote:Two of my four most recent rescues are clinging to their old peeling painted Babylonia shells. I've had them since this past spring. Both have molted and need to change but are sporting their too tight shells like a fat man in a Speedo.
I have about 50 options in their size range. Sigh.
Thank you, people have tried to correct me for doing this but the crabs seem to prefer them after I boil with saltwater. They check out every single one. I don't really mind the shells being dull.Rawrgeous wrote:I just wanted to clarify that it is okay to boil the shells in salt water, it just can dull the polish. The crabs prefer "salty" shells as that is what they would have access to in the wild, as shells wash up on shore from the ocean.