Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Ive had this happen twice and I simply grabbed a small net and snatched him up. Siphon can and may cause injury.Anybody know how to get him out? Other than draining the chamber and removing the plumbing?
Brainstorm Please!![]()
The tank is 30" tall, and I had the overflow designed to be as small as possible. Not sure there is room for a net, but a good suggestion nonetheless Thank youIve had this happen twice and I simply grabbed a small net and snatched him up. Siphon can and may cause injury.

I use a 2" brine shrimp netThe tank is 30" tall, and I had the overflow designed to be as small as possible. Not sure there is room for a net, but a good suggestion nonetheless Thank you
Keep the brainstorming going!![]()
That is another good idea, it would have to be a pretty strong air flow to chase him 30" to the top. I have an Eheim dual outlet air pump and sufficient lengths of air tubing to give it a shot. I also have a "T" that I can attach two tubes together to combine the airflow into one tube on the end to combine the output of both effluences, doubling the strength of the output. I am beginning to like this idea more and more. ThanksPut an airstone down there and try to force him to the top
If I could find one long enough, that might work, or in conjunction with the air stone in the bottom to bring him to the surface.I use a 2" brine shrimp net
No. 10 Eagle Claw? LolAnybody know how to get him out? Other than draining the chamber and removing the plumbing?
Brainstorm Please!![]()
Even a net can cause injury. So I don’t understand your point with the siphon.Ive had this happen twice and I simply grabbed a small net and snatched him up. Siphon can and may cause injury.
That is an interesting idea, but I am asthmatic and I am not sure I have the lungs for that. I am just about sure to pass out. Thanks thoughPush a length of return pump pipe down there and BLOW. I've done this twice due to a custom tank with a poorly designed overflow. It was the only option left, and yes, it risked injury. Worked though.
Well I have a 30" tall tank, and regrettably he is hanging down around the bottom of the overflow chamber. I am feeding him and he seems to be pretty calm, but no wrasse likes being in a confined space. He does not appear stressed, he is not emaciated and there are no legions or spots developing on him.I have had this happen a few times now but fortunately my RS Max Nano has each section connected to one so I was able to carefully “chase” him up out of the back chamber with a net.
In my 4’ tank I had my C. lubbocki manage to make it down into the sump through the back chamber. So if your wrasse is in the area of the back chamber where he can slide into the sump then that may be the best way to get him is through trying to lure him into the sump and then net him out in there.

Nice Stuart, but I don't want to filet him, besides his spinal column would just be a choking hazard or a tooth pickNo. 10 Eagle Claw? Lol
So I don’t understand your point with the siphon.
In a previous post I had mentioned the use of a "SLURP" gun. It is a device used to collect fish in the ocean, and it uses a siphon mechanism to "Slurp" up the fish 1st into a smaller diameter chamber with a 3" opening, then into a larger chamber that might be 6" in diameter. Not a practical tool for the little amount of space that I have to remove my wrasse.

