Drip method requires several things:
1) 2 buckets (or sm sweater boxes)
2) Airline hose
3) 1 large sweater box (or whatever to catch overflow)
4) paper-clips
5) Gravity
Drip acclimation relies on gravity to create siphon action through a hose from a bucket of higher elevation to a bucket of lower elevation. The rate of drip can be controled by kinking the hose. The system I used to use at the lab I jury-rigged with sweater boxes, but anything that will hold about 5 gallons of water is pretty good. I would place the water I wanted to acclimate to on a high shelf, place my fish in a bucket of their regular water on the lower shelf, then run a gravity-siphon between the two buckets using airline tubbing. I would use the paper-clips to kink the hose so that the flow rate would utilize 5 gallons over a 24hr period (this you begin to recognize after doing it for so long). The fish bucket had a drilled overflow spout which would drain into a sweater box on the floor.
That's pretty much the gist of it. The object is to replace the existing water with the new water over a specific period of time so that mixing occures between the two and allows the fish to slowly adapt to the new conditions. Any materials you find that can accomplish this can be used to create a drip system.
~~Colesea
__________________ The above, of course, is strictly opinion. If you don't have your own, I'll gladly give you mine. |