peter5930
New member
Here it is. Should be fairly self-explanatory.
This big tank doesn't have any caudates in it, and I'm just using it as a giant daphnia culture at the moment. I might use it for something large and territorial, or just fill it with hundreds and hundreds of something smaller:
Each of these tanks is 3ft by 1.5ft. I got 50 of them at £12 each from a guy who got them second-hand from a commercial fish breeder. I'm planning to get more soon.
I have axolotls in the pond and the pondquarium in this picture. The pondquarium had a leak, which I've hopefully fixed, but I haven't refilled it yet. There's still plenty of room for the axolotls though, since it goes down to a good depth below ground and that leak was at the bottom corner of one of the panels, where the ground had subsided and pulled the liner away:
Time will tell if I put enough concrete under these shelves to prevent them from slowly sinking into the ground:
As you can see, I'm incredibly neat and tidy in everything I do:
About half the tanks are empty, waiting for things to fill them:
Those newspapers will eventually be converted to newts and salamanders, via an intermediate stage in which they're converted into worms in my compost bins:
An air distribution manifold. It's connected to a garden hose with liberal amounts of hot-melt glue, and the hose is connected at the other end to a large air pump in the garage:
A closeup of one of the tanks. This one has banded newt juveniles in it:
This big tank doesn't have any caudates in it, and I'm just using it as a giant daphnia culture at the moment. I might use it for something large and territorial, or just fill it with hundreds and hundreds of something smaller:

Each of these tanks is 3ft by 1.5ft. I got 50 of them at £12 each from a guy who got them second-hand from a commercial fish breeder. I'm planning to get more soon.

I have axolotls in the pond and the pondquarium in this picture. The pondquarium had a leak, which I've hopefully fixed, but I haven't refilled it yet. There's still plenty of room for the axolotls though, since it goes down to a good depth below ground and that leak was at the bottom corner of one of the panels, where the ground had subsided and pulled the liner away:

Time will tell if I put enough concrete under these shelves to prevent them from slowly sinking into the ground:

As you can see, I'm incredibly neat and tidy in everything I do:

About half the tanks are empty, waiting for things to fill them:

Those newspapers will eventually be converted to newts and salamanders, via an intermediate stage in which they're converted into worms in my compost bins:

An air distribution manifold. It's connected to a garden hose with liberal amounts of hot-melt glue, and the hose is connected at the other end to a large air pump in the garage:



A closeup of one of the tanks. This one has banded newt juveniles in it:
