Wow dude.
I absolutely love the amount of great new information I keep finding in these threads. But for the love of Yoda stop bickering. A good argument is fine. All I ask is take a second before you click that "Submit" button and read over your post one more time. Try to think if there's something, or some poor choice of wording, that could be misconstrued by someone, or could be offensive to someone. And if you read something offensive, just assume they didn't intend it that way, and don't try to get defensive in response.
Misinterpret me, you will not. I've got experience in this. I'm the emperor of saying stupid things. Heck I'm married, I'm reminded of how stupid the things I say are on a daily basis
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
LOL
So anyway, if you think I'm talking about you, I probably am. If you think I should be talking about someone else, I'm probably talking about them too.
Now for the other 90% of this thread:
1. In my experience, EE doesn't biodegrade "live" crabs. But it does biodegrade dead crabs. If a crab dies during molt, within 3 months the crab will "disappear". This can also happen to a slower extent in extremely damp sand.
2. I switched away from even 50% EE due to it mucking up the water filters.
3. I own 4 books written in the 50s to the 90s on crab care, by people with decades of experience. Some of the advice in the books would shock you. Stuff we used to tell people 5 years ago would make you laugh today. Crab care is continuously evolving. Nothing is "right" or "wrong". Stuff is just good advice or recommendations.
In fact, here's an old post of mine, a little "counter-culture" dark side post:
http://www.hermitcrabassociation.com/ph ... hp?t=57785&
4. There are many, many variables to crab care. It's hard to identify which ones are causing deaths, or are helping maintain the long-lifers. I remember someone once had a ton of deaths and tried changing everything to no avail, only finally realizing one bottle of food had gone bad.
A certain substrate may work best for one crabber who keeps a certain humidity, uses UTH instead of lights, replaces water daily, spot cleans poo, and bathes crabs.
A different substrate may work best for another crabber with a different humidity, uses lights, uses water filters, does partial substrate changes, and dumps saltwater into the substrate.
The number of variables is just very large. And that's why it will always be the case that what works for one person may not work for another.
5. All the members of this board, and other boards (LHC, CSJ, etc), and other websites (TCP) who have performed experiments, or have experience, have posted articles describing their experiences, experiments, and anecdotal information.
6. Climate is not particularly relevant if you have air conditioning. I can guarantee that except for about 2 months out of the year, our house is never the same temp nor humidity as it is outside. I think crabs respond more to pressure and day/night cycles. Now if you live in Florida and let your crabs live in the backyard, that might be a different story.
7. I had 50 crabs when I was in high school and I knew every one by name, and new which shell each was in, and I took them all out for a "walk" in my room every night. Now I have 30 crabs, only a few have names, and I admit I too am a crab hoarder
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/003.gif)
I just love having tons of little guys crawling all over my bonsai.
8. Nobody thinks Bob is lying. I respect the experience and advice. In fact I think the 5:1 is good advice. But some of us wish he would share his knowledge directly with the community. Just because we desire to see first-hand information doesn't mean we think he's lying. Please do not continue to believe that is so.
JMT.
Stuck-up, half-witted, scruffy-looking crab-herder since '92.