First Story: Setup of a 10-Gallon Tank in the Bedroom
Ain't she a beaut? Well this little oasis of calm was designed to lull me to sleep. I would get some pretty fish, a bubble wall, and watch them swim every night until I drifted off into dreams of mermaids.
So I went to the pet store and picked up some platys, which look like a tequila sunrise with fins. Gorgeous. My eye was caught by the mystery snails, so I got 2 goldens, a white and a black. When I got home, I thought I acclimated everyone well to their new environment, but was saddened to see that the platys died within hours. Disheartened, I decided to leave them be until the next day, when I would bury them <ahem> at sea.
I got home, however, and this was what I witnessed:

Oh the unbridled carnage! So I left the vicious little cephalopods alone, and they had those fish picked clean in a matter of days. There was one pristine skeleton left. I would have gotten a picture but by the time I thought of it, even THAT was gone.

Another day I came home to find one of the snails surfing the bubble wall. At first I thought it was dead when I saw it floating at the top. Then I saw the sucker drop to the bottom, crawl up to the bubble rock, let go, and surf the wave! Who knew snails were thrill seekers?
So this began my complete fascination with the mystery snail.
What I have learned so far is:
- they can grow to 15 cm, or 5 - 6 inches!
- they mate
- they are carnivorous
- they tolerate a broad range of temperatures
- they like to surface for air, breathing with their huge siphons
- they are thrill seekers (dropping from the top of the tank, surfing the bubble wall, spinning in the bubbles)
- they haul snail BOO-TAY! Those suckers can cruise
- they have complex eyes
- you can eat them
And that my friends, is my intro to the incredible mystery of the Mystery Snail. Today I learned that my snails have already bred, leaving a perfect little, teeny, tiny, eensy, weensy, iiiiitty biiiiiitty perfect little snail baby. The joy increases.

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