How I brought my friend's fish tank to my home.
A few days ago my friend Yulia, who leaves this island soon, asked me to pick up her gigantic fish tank with tropical fish inside it. I went by car alone, because I hoped to fold rear seats and bring the tank, fish, and the stand in one trip.
First we decided to throw out two thirds of the water and try to lift the tank. The full tank had approximately 100 L of water, so we thought that one third will be around 35-40 kg. We filled three buckets with water using a hand pump and threw the water into the toilet. Then we tried to lift up the tank. No way! It was still too heavy. I suggested to move all eight species of fish in buckets ( there were five small fish and two big and they were probably expensive).
My plan was to use three buckets - one for each of the VIP fish and one for the rest. My friend started to worry about fish feelings and asked me to try to lift up the tank again. But it was almost immovable. We chose plan B with personal buckets. I brought a scoop-net and the fun had begun! It was so hard to catch fish, especially the expensive one, who even had a name "Mary". My friend was whining about not to hurt her Mary, and it was pretty distracting. When I suggested to her to help me, she declined, saying that it's too much for her heart.
After 10 minutes of chasing fish I moved all of them in buckets. Fish didn't like the new home and tried to jump out. It was good that I didn't put much water into buckets. Then we drained all water from the tank and tried to lift it. It was still too heavy! Finally we understood (some people might laugh, but we really didn't think about this in the first place) that all of the gravel on the bottom is pretty heavy itself. We scooped all the gravel out of the tank and only then could we lift the thing!
We put the tank and three buckets in my car. I couldn't put the stand there, too, there was no space left. My car already looked like a fresh fish delivery truck. I decided to come back for the stand again later. My friend lives not too far from me, but in the evening traffic one way takes at least 40 minutes.
I was a little bit of a hurry because I didn't want to spend all the day driving back and forth. When I started to drive I found out that I can't drive faster than 30 km per hour without the risk of spilling all the fish and water from the buckets onto the floor of my car.
I went to the big state road because its surface is relatively flat and smooth. I drove very slow in the very left lane (in Japan we drive on the left side of the road), and all cars who overtook my lane tried to look into my car to see what kind of nut is driving so slowly. It was another adventure to experience. Fortunately, slow driving brought me a record of fuel consumption - the best eco drive ever!
When I got home Mary was still alive. My friend was texting me every 10 minutes to ask whether her fish is ok or not. I brought all fishy stuff upstairs and went again to pick up the stand. After the big fish tank, lifting up the stand of 20 kg was a piece of cake. When I finally got home, it was already after 7 pm. I needed to buy new gravel, so I hurried to the nearest shop which closes at 8 pm. I finished my big work around 10 pm.
It was so nice to seat in front of the tank, sip on coffee and observe the fish happily swimming in clean water and catching flakes.
I threw out all snails and mollusks with the old gravel so now I can't observe their wars for survival. But today I found small white eggs on the bottom. We will see what happens soon!