MistressOfAxies
New member
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2008
- Messages
- 104
- Reaction score
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- Age
- 39
- Location
- Brisbane, Australia
- Country
- Australia
I've been away from the forums for awhile due to busy life plus work but I'm back with good news from my 15 axolotls lol. I was helping my partner clean his cichlade (think that's how you spell them) tank & I noticed in one of my axolotl tanks there were all these eggs attached to a plastic plant I have in there.
I have about 80-90 eggs I'd say. I am going to try & hatch them all which will probably be a big task so if I can't keep up I will advertise, so if anyone in Brisbane, Australia interested sent me a message. I figured if I removed the plant & placed them in another tank seperate might not be wise as the chiller I have running on the tank is probably best for them. What I have done is placed the plant with the eggs on it in a large breeder/baby fish net attached to the side of the tank by suckion caps. I don't know if this will be sufficent enough for when they hatch but I have 1 more breeder net to possibly transfer half & half when hatch if they're overcrowded.
Another issue was the mother (which I don't know which axie cause they're all fat) laid some eggs straight on the sand substrate. So when I had to scoop them out and try to divide the sand from the jelly goo this proved quite difficult & as a result I have some granules of sand mixed with the eggs in the net which I hope will not cause problems for when they try to hatch.
Now food also proved to be difficult to get. I rang every aquarium and pet-store almost in Brisbane asking about daphnia but no one seems to sell it. The serviceman at the aquarium I went to sold me frozen baby brine shrimp & told me to disolve it in warm water then tip them in when feeding them. He suggested if I swirl the water or make it appear like they're moving there's a good chance they will eat it. Whats your thoughts on this? Failing that if you don't think it will work I will have to try and get live brineshrimp which I have no clue about them.
Any feedback on this be appreciated. As I want to be a proud momma I'm so stoked though, for ages my axolotls did nothing but wait on their precious food now they're getting into romancing hehe.
I have about 80-90 eggs I'd say. I am going to try & hatch them all which will probably be a big task so if I can't keep up I will advertise, so if anyone in Brisbane, Australia interested sent me a message. I figured if I removed the plant & placed them in another tank seperate might not be wise as the chiller I have running on the tank is probably best for them. What I have done is placed the plant with the eggs on it in a large breeder/baby fish net attached to the side of the tank by suckion caps. I don't know if this will be sufficent enough for when they hatch but I have 1 more breeder net to possibly transfer half & half when hatch if they're overcrowded.
Another issue was the mother (which I don't know which axie cause they're all fat) laid some eggs straight on the sand substrate. So when I had to scoop them out and try to divide the sand from the jelly goo this proved quite difficult & as a result I have some granules of sand mixed with the eggs in the net which I hope will not cause problems for when they try to hatch.
Now food also proved to be difficult to get. I rang every aquarium and pet-store almost in Brisbane asking about daphnia but no one seems to sell it. The serviceman at the aquarium I went to sold me frozen baby brine shrimp & told me to disolve it in warm water then tip them in when feeding them. He suggested if I swirl the water or make it appear like they're moving there's a good chance they will eat it. Whats your thoughts on this? Failing that if you don't think it will work I will have to try and get live brineshrimp which I have no clue about them.
Any feedback on this be appreciated. As I want to be a proud momma I'm so stoked though, for ages my axolotls did nothing but wait on their precious food now they're getting into romancing hehe.