

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I'm curious. How did you deal with the mess that accumulates on the bottom of the jars? Did you just leave it and only change the water? I tried your method with the panty hose on one end, and I couldn't get any decent water flow, plus I couldn't suck up any of the chunks of food to remove them. How did you remove the dead zoeae and unbeaten pellets?Renroc wrote:100% water changes are really stressful on the zoea. I would really suggest rethinking that. Perhaps at least in one jar
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I ended up using a plastic drinking straw (more ridged) without the stocking and a airline tube. The straw made it easy to direct the suction to the gunge on the bottom. Always into a bowl and checked for escapees. Got pretty good at picked them out with medicine dropper. Dead zoea and mega are food for the others so I didn’t worry too much about removing them. Feed less so you have less waste.mlakers wrote:I'm curious. How did you deal with the mess that accumulates on the bottom of the jars? Did you just leave it and only change the water? I tried your method with the panty hose on one end, and I couldn't get any decent water flow, plus I couldn't suck up any of the chunks of food to remove them. How did you remove the dead zoeae and unbeaten pellets?Renroc wrote:100% water changes are really stressful on the zoea. I would really suggest rethinking that. Perhaps at least in one jar
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk