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Petebert
November 15th 03, 03:49 AM
Im moving 8 miles across town, whats the best way to move my 55 gallon fresh
water fish? For a minute I thought about buying a 25 gallon trash can to
move as much of my current water as possible, then I remembered that Im not
strong enough to lift that much! The fish tank move will be done in a back
of a mini van. Id have quite a few plastic bins, maybe fill those with
water? one containing the fish. The tank has 2 aussie rainbows, 5 giant
danios, 2 gouramis, 3 cory cats and 3 little algea eaters dont remember the
name right now, oxy something or another.

Mike
November 15th 03, 05:19 AM
Use a garder hose and put a 2-25+ gal units in your mini van. Use a garden
hose to siphon it into the container(hope the mini van is lower than the
tank!). Get to the new place and pump it back in( either by siphoning it
into 5 gal buckets or like I did with a big coy pond pump or such -900+gph).
Toss your fish in the buckets also.


"Petebert" > wrote in message
...
> Im moving 8 miles across town, whats the best way to move my 55 gallon
fresh
> water fish? For a minute I thought about buying a 25 gallon trash can to
> move as much of my current water as possible, then I remembered that Im
not
> strong enough to lift that much! The fish tank move will be done in a back
> of a mini van. Id have quite a few plastic bins, maybe fill those with
> water? one containing the fish. The tank has 2 aussie rainbows, 5 giant
> danios, 2 gouramis, 3 cory cats and 3 little algea eaters dont remember
the
> name right now, oxy something or another.
>
>

Petebert
November 15th 03, 03:47 PM
that is an excellent idea, only problem is I live in a apt. and cant get my
van very close to my house but the new place will have an attached garage

"Mike" > wrote in message
...
> Use a garder hose and put a 2-25+ gal units in your mini van. Use a garden
> hose to siphon it into the container(hope the mini van is lower than the
> tank!). Get to the new place and pump it back in( either by siphoning it
> into 5 gal buckets or like I did with a big coy pond pump or
such -900+gph).
> Toss your fish in the buckets also.
>
>
> "Petebert" > wrote in message
> ...
> > Im moving 8 miles across town, whats the best way to move my 55 gallon
> fresh
> > water fish? For a minute I thought about buying a 25 gallon trash can to
> > move as much of my current water as possible, then I remembered that Im
> not
> > strong enough to lift that much! The fish tank move will be done in a
back
> > of a mini van. Id have quite a few plastic bins, maybe fill those with
> > water? one containing the fish. The tank has 2 aussie rainbows, 5 giant
> > danios, 2 gouramis, 3 cory cats and 3 little algea eaters dont remember
> the
> > name right now, oxy something or another.
> >
> >
>
>

Lydia
November 17th 03, 11:48 PM
I recently moved from an apartment to a house successfully. No fishy
deaths. I have a lot of the same fish you mentioned in two tanks - a 20
gallon and a 10 gallon. My move was a 30 minute drive. So the situation
sounds pretty similar except that I don't have quite the volume that you do.

Supplies used:

1 styrofoam cooler (got it from an Omaha Steak gift sent to me)
5 of those ziploc storage containers w/lids that are rectangular and about
12"x6"x5"
30 or so QUALITY ziploc gallon size bags

What I did:

I tried to salvage as much of the aquarium water I could so I filled the
rectangular storage containers most of the way full with aquarium water and
put about 6 or 7 fish in each container and put the lids on. Then I double
bagged the ziploc bags and filled each about 2/3 full with aquarium water
(they were getting too heavy to fill all the way) - did this until I ran out
of bags. I put a couple of the bags of just water on the bottom of the
cooler. Then put the fish in their containers in on top of the bags. And a
couple more bags of water only on top. At the time I only had the one
cooler. Had I had another one I'd have put the rest of the bags of water in
another cooler. The remaining water in the aquariums I poured out until
they were light enough to lift and wouldn't slosh out in the car. We left
right away and got to our new house where we took everything inside. I
cleaned out the tanks really well, got them all set up and then starting
emptying the baggies of water into them. When all the aquarium water was
gone, if there wasn't enough for the fish yet, I filled more with tap water.
Then put the fish and the water they were in from the containers into the
aquariums and some stress coat and shazam - all done.

Having said that, I would *not* recommend the ziploc baggies. The
containers worked really well, but the baggies were leaky - even double
bagged. In retrospect, I don't know WHY I got the baggies!! A plastic
container would have worked better I'm sure... something with a lid to keep
everything dry :).


So anyway, hope all that helps and you can use it to customize your own
move.
Good luck!
Lydia




"Petebert" > wrote in message
...
> Im moving 8 miles across town, whats the best way to move my 55 gallon
fresh
> water fish? For a minute I thought about buying a 25 gallon trash can to
> move as much of my current water as possible, then I remembered that Im
not
> strong enough to lift that much! The fish tank move will be done in a back
> of a mini van. Id have quite a few plastic bins, maybe fill those with
> water? one containing the fish. The tank has 2 aussie rainbows, 5 giant
> danios, 2 gouramis, 3 cory cats and 3 little algea eaters dont remember
the
> name right now, oxy something or another.
>
>