Ok so there is actually 3 left
& perhaps I've gone completely insane............. I've acted like a giant wave and dumped them on the sand like a retreating tide. If I left them where they were they would have died anyway
![Sad :(](./images/smilies/icon_sad.gif)
I'm trying to think logically, there is no jar in the wild & no plastic log to crawl up just the gentle gradient of a beach, with sea weed to hide in to keep moist & out of sight, perfectly natural damp substrate/sand high temp and high humidity.
They are actually crawling about! I will be ever vigilant to make sure they do not dry out. The ones I had separated died so I am assuming these reached the point where they needed to leave the water and could not.
Here are my latest pics, hopefully it's not the last time you see these guys
![Image](http://imageshack.us/a/img560/8612/dsc091261.jpg)
and the transition tank right now
![Image](http://imageshack.us/a/img708/571/transitionnow.jpg)
there is, salt water down low in elevation just like the layout of beach (hope this makes sense to you) higher up there is fresh water and on the way there is food, food they've been eating (tropical fish flakes and sea vegie flakes and instead of dried shrimp I've used dried blood worms as they crumble easy, the shrimp needed to soak for a while before they could pull much off of them) cuttlefish, cork bark and a tiny moss pit.
Like I said they are actually crawling about......... for now