I taught my pet rock to sit and stay, that took a while but I did it…….so,,How do I get my sea monkeys to do their tricks?
I taught my pet rock to sit and stay, that took a while but I did it…….so,,How do I get my sea monkeys to do their tricks?
About the same time the sea monkey’s were poplar, i remember some type of colored rocks that you put in the water and it took a long time to grow, but it had many diffrent pretty colors crystals that grew upward. Does anybody remember the name of these silly things. I think my daughter would get a kick out of it as i did when i was little. Thanks for any help.
Posted in Sea Monkeys
Tagged Anybody, colored rocks, diffrent, long time, magic water, monkey, name, poplar, pretty colors, rock, rock crystals, sea, Sea Monkeys, Sea-Monkey, silly things, Time, type, water, water rock
In your opioin what is the absouletely perfect pet for a busy college student on a budget? Dog? Cat? Fish? Turtle? Spider? A Rock? Sea Monkeys? Use your imagination…but please something you can actually buy. Last time I checked petsmart didn’t carry unicorns.
I can’t have a cat or dog right now.
My boyfriend and I just bought these sexy shrimp online a few days ago. They are pretty cool but they are A LOT smaller then I thought they’d be. Right now we have them in a catch cup with a piece of rock but we want to know if they’d survive if we let them out.
We have two blue yellow tail damsels, a domino damsel, a 4 stripe damsel, a ocellaris clownfish, a clown fairy wrasse, a snowflake eel, a serpant starfish, a cleaner shrimp and a Condylactis Anemone.
I am starting up a reef tank and would eventually like to get a mandarin (in 6 plus months after much research). I am putting in crushed coral substrate and adding live rock.
I know these fish feed off of copepods (sometimes brine shrimp). I am wondering how you clean the substrate. If you vacuum the substrate, aren’t you vacuuming up the copepods – thus the mandarins food source? How does that work?
I am curious and cant figure it out.
Thank you.
Posted in Brine Shrimp
Tagged Coral, dragonet, goby, Mandarin, mandarin goby, reef, reef tank, research, rock, saltwater, saltwater tank, substrate, tank