Whatever you don't move the tank full it most likely will crack.
Your Best bet is to find a 5 gal bucket food grade and add water from the tank into it then put fish in.
this might not be so good if you can't find a good bucket so find a large plastic bag.
Make sure it is a bag that can be tied shut and is preferably food grade so you figure if you can eat food out of the fish won't die from a chemical.
I don't know how many fish you have or how large but I would take a bag about the size of a bread bag and fill no more than half full with water from the aquarium. Put no more than 4 fish per bag if they are small fish only 2 if they are med to large.
After you put fish in, grasp the bag from top and turn the bag so the top twists tight leaving a big balloon of air in the bag above the water line.
Make sure you have a bag full of air 50% is good.
Tie the bag shut or fold over the twist and put rubber band on.
Do this with all fish then empty tank all the way.
Put tank in vehicle
Stand the bags up in the fish tank so they don't slop around and throw a blanket over them if cold out. Towels work too.
the darkness will help keep them calm and the towels blanket will help keep at even temperature.
When you get to your new location set the tank back up but don't fill all the way to top.
Float the fish on top for 10-20 minutes.
Open bags add some water and float 10 more minutes.
Again, open bags up and add more water and float another 10 minutes.
You are probably safe at this point to release them into the tank.
You need to slowly get them adjusted to the new water and the temperature.
Ideally, if you had a way, like a 5 gal bucket to save half the water from your tank, you would be best off to put 50% of the old tank water back in and the rest fresh clean water treated to remove chlorine of course.
If you are using a different tank at new location follow the same steps of floating them and adding new water etc...
and for the trip, the fish will be fine if you make certain they have air in the bag. Do not fill to top with water.
The bag should be tight with air so as you could pop it like a balloon.
Good luck with the move.
Hope this helps.
2006-11-26 09:39:21
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answer #1
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answered by successful_gal 2
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I wouldn't put them in baggies, as they could run out of air. The best bet for long trips like that is to use a rubermaid yub, or if you are cramped for room in the car, use a nice sized bucket that is taller than it is wide. This way the carbon dioxide in the water can exchange more quickly with the oxygen above it. Also, there are battery operated air pumps sold at some pet stores and online. That would really help.
Just empty the tank leaving enough water to keep the rocks moist. If you have live plants, bag those in tank water. Also, do the SAME for your filter media so the good bacteria that regulates the tank doesn't die off! Otherwise, your tank could crash. If it does crash after the move and ammonia or nitrites rise, I suggest using prime to drop the levels a bit so your fish dont die. Just make sure you dont use too much of the prime. If you delete all of the ammonia or nitrites, then there will be non for the beneficial bacteria to consume, meaning they cant grow and you tank will never cycle again completely.
2006-11-26 09:45:21
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Put them in a large plastic bag (ziplock will do, but you can probably get some at your local petstore). Put 1/3 water and 2/3 air (they need oxygen).
If you can kind some bag buddies, those are great too, adding oxygen to the water. Use 1/2 tablet if it's a small bag.
Then pack the bags fairly tightly into a box (so they don't roll around and jiggle when the car is moving).
And there ya go! It's not a bad idea to bring home one of your filter catridges and/or gravel (keep it wet) to put into your new tank, to keep the population of nitrifying bacteria.
2006-11-26 09:20:51
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answer #3
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answered by Zoe 6
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it is going to be not difficulty-free. How massive is your tank, its needed we've that training. Drain the water on your tank with a siphon, to the point there is about a million/5 of the unique water contained in the tank. go away your fish in there. move the tank and fish into your vehicle's trunk, and confirm that's put in an section the position it wont move round. position an aquarium lid over the tank and use some products of scotch tape to carry down the lid. filter out, air pump and different upload-ons %. it right into a field. something contained in the fish tank, castles, ships, something that ought to fall, eliminate. Have 2 people help you carry your tank onto your vehicle. One at each and every end of the tank, palms on the timber footprint of the tank. once you've a wide cooler or bucket with water information lid, promote off your unique siphoned water into it and shipment it onto your vehicle. And your prepared! in case you want, you may positioned your fish in a separate bucket. i advise in simple terms leaving them contained in the tank. Feed your fish once each and every 2.5 hours. once you've tropical fish, you'll favor to characteristic warm water probable at a relax section. that's likewise optionally available to move to the puppy shop and purchase an emergency battery powered air pump on your tank. once you get on your vacation spot, tank the tank out and move it to the position you want it. verify on your fish, they must be tremendous. Pour contained in the water you had kept, put in the filter out and airpump. initiate each and every thing up. finally, put on your more advantageous decorations. put in some stress coat for the fish, and go away the mild off for some hours. they are going to maximum probable be lower than various of stress.
2016-11-26 23:42:08
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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in a plastic bag half ful of water DO NOT BLOW AIR INTO BAG
it will give them carbon dioxide posioning dont put more than 4 fish in each bag make sure bag is tightly filled iwth air you can buy actual fish transport bags from a pet store
2006-11-26 09:20:59
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answer #5
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answered by esmth517 2
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