Earthquake damage finally got the better

duanes

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Jun 7, 2007
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Isla Taboga Panama via Milwaukee
Over the last couple years, there have been about a half dozen tremors, and one 5.5 earthquake here on Isla Taboga.
They were enough to rattle my 180 gal tanks seams sufficiently enough to cause up to maybe up to 20 gallons per day leakage.
And with our islands water facility being off line for over a month, and the start of the dry season, ...well...a little disconcerting.
On Panama's version of Craigs list a 220 gal with stand popped up for sale for $450, I went a looked at it, it is well braced, so I bit the bullet.
It arrives tomorrow (hopefully intact, always a gamble(?)by panga (small boat) over 10 miles of Panama bay to the beach near where I live, so today, I optomistally tore down the leaky 180.
Fish and aquatic plants were transferred to the 125 gal sump, terrestrial floating plants, some rockwork, and submerged logs into a 30 gal bucket.
7E6F8B63-25BD-4037-B813-767FE8446A2B_1_201_a.jpeg
Below the tank set up, pre most earthquake damage

D55C93E3-9CF1-411C-AC21-967E7B1E0A37_1_201_a.jpeg
 
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deeda

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Mar 26, 2008
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I wish you great luck in getting the new to you tank delivered unharmed. I can't imagine having to depend on others to transport a tank in a small boat or for that matter the issues with the water plant due to the earthquakes.
 

jjohnwm

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Mar 29, 2019
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Considering your climate that allows you to keep fish outside year round, I'm always surprised that you don't keep a few stock tank "ponds", and/or make a few plywood tanks. I think either option would be more earthquake-resistant than all-glass construction.
 

MultipleTankSyndrome

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Considering your climate that allows you to keep fish outside year round, I'm always surprised that you don't keep a few stock tank "ponds", and/or make a few plywood tanks. I think either option would be more earthquake-resistant than all-glass construction.
+1 to the stock tanks. There's not much an earthquake could do to them in terms of physical damage, since they're not rigid like glass.
 

fishguy1978

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Good luck. Hope it all goes well.
 
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DrownedFishonFire

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Nov 2, 2008
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Best of luck! Looking foward to the post on people bringing it over
 
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The Masked Shadow

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Considering your climate that allows you to keep fish outside year round, I'm always surprised that you don't keep a few stock tank "ponds", and/or make a few plywood tanks. I think either option would be more earthquake-resistant than all-glass construction.
+2
 
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