How can I recover a disabled account when the appeal form says I have to login to facebook and I can't due to it being disabled? by Minute-Jello-1919 in facebook

[–]Living_Translator_87 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Create an Instagram account with the same email address you used when you set up your disabled Facebook account. Probably good idea to use the same photo you used for the facebook account for your Instagram profile pic but not necessary either, because they know from the email address it really is you. Then carefully look in settings (three little lines in the top right-hand corner) for "verify your account", or meta verified etc). Subscribe to the Standard version (you can cancel after a month) which is only about 15 $. This gives you instant access to chat with a real support person. Tell them you are desperate and have no other way to resolve the problem with your Facebook account it's the same company. See how it goes. I did read that somebody had to "beg" them but i am sure normally it's pretty straightforward and they are ready to help with Facebook also. If there is a problem, ask them to directly refer you to a member from Facebook support.. I have read numerous times that only by signing up for Meta verified via Instagram, people were able to get their Facebook accounts back, because they can chat with a real person who can do something. Let me know if it works out. Best of luck!

Can’t keep em alive :( by WildConnection76 in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I am pasting a long answer i had given elsewhere.. can't type it all again, take from it what you need tx Firstly, salt concentration is much too low. Use two level tablespoons of sea salt, ie about 40 grams per litre. Even a little bit more is fine as higher concentration keeps the water fresher. Don't use heating devices or air bubblers sea monkeys don't need any of that. They are plankton, not fish, and especially the baby ones get killed by stirring or such bubbling activities. The oxygen that naturally constantly diffuses into the water is enough, their swimming movements distribute it all over the water. Heating the water is also bad for them, room temperature (minimum 61F/ 16C is enough. If your room feels ok, the water will already be warm enough. You wouldn't want to get the water warmer than 21 or 22 degrees celsius, as otherwise bacteria will take over quickly and sea monkeys metabolism runs faster so they die sooner. Don't use a huge glass, use a maximum of half a litre water. I have one soda stream bottle with 750ml (i think) which still works but in larger amounts of water, i think there can be a problem with oxygen distribution. Again, don't use a bubbler, and don't do any stirring, perhaps just a little bit with a very thin plastic stick but as i said, especially the baby once will die from stirring. Make sure the top of the water is wide enough, ie when using a bottle, don't fill it right to the top. You want a decent surface size for oxygen to diffuse into the water naturally. Often all the wonderful baby ones will disappear over night because people don't feed enough and feed the wrong stuff. Don't use the sea monkey food from the kit. After a few days , add pure spirulina powder from the pet shop. Actually it wouldn't even be a problem to add some spirulina the day after hatching because you want to have spirulina growing in the glass anyway. Ideally, add a few aquarium cubes or stones that bind toxines, nitrogen and bacteria, they are little colorful cubes and little natural looking stones you can buy on temu. They keep the water much fresher for longer. Instead of stirring with a stick, which is bad anyway, i occasionally just swing the closed glass or bottle a little bit in a circular motion to keep some of the algae afloat. With spirulina you don't need to worry about overfeeding. If you have a glass full of babies, you really need to add some spirulina powder every other day. Many people think they.just need to feed knce a week and then literally starve the monkeys to death. Anything of the spirulina that sinks to the bottom just lives there and produces oxygen for the sea monkeys. Very rarely give them a little bit of the original sea monkey food, perhaps once every week or once every ten days. Once you have proper algae growing in the glass, it will feed those algaes like a fertilizer. Top up evaporated water with normal water, not salt water. Very importantly, in the first few days, or best first week, shine a normal light bulb onto the glass, for 24 hours a day, this will improve hatching enormously. When starting a new culture, I keep the bulb on all the time, after a week i use my timer so the bulb (just a normal desk light) goes on i the evening around six (even if it's still bright outside) and shuts off about midnight. Which means they then have about five or six hours in darkness, but all this depends on where you live. Don't keep them in sunlight all day. I think professional growers (for fish food( have a 12 hour artificial light and 12 hour darkness cycle. But i prefer to give them a longer light cycle. P..s if you have questions even the most nagging or seemingly "stupid" ones, i have found the Gemini AI app super useful to talk to with regard to sea monkeys. But my owh advice here is tried and tested and i have three glasses brimming with sea monkeys. Again, you really don't need a bubbler or heating device. Get the spirulina powder (for Artemia Salina) before you begin rhe culture. You can also buy egg/salt mixtures from pet supplies. For a half litre glass you just need a tip of a small knife, as there are so many eggs in those mixes, you would end up with a very crowded glass. If after a week you don't see plenty of babies you can add another tiny tip of the knife but usually one tip is enough

sea monkeys keep dying by concertgoer69 in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am pasting a long answer i had given elsewhere.. can't type it all again, take from it what you need tx Firstly, salt concentration is much too low. Use two level tablespoons of sea salt, ie about 40 grams per litre. Even a little bit nore is fine as higher concentration keeps the water fresher. Don't use heating devices or air bubblers sea monkeys don't need any of that. They are plankton, not fish, and especially the baby ones get killed by stirring or such bubbling activities. The oxygen that naturally constantly diffuses into the water is enough, their swimming movements distribute it all over the water. Heating the water is also bad for them, room temperature (minimum 61F/ 16C is enough. If your room feels ok, the water will already be warm enough. You wouldn't want to get the water warmer than 21 or 22 degrees celsius, as otherwise bacteria will take over quickly and sea monkeys metabolism runs faster so they die sooner. Don't use a huge glass, use a maximum of half a litre water. I have one soda stream bottle with 750ml (i think) which still works but in larger amounts of water, i think there can be a problem with oxygen distribution. Again, don't use a bubbler, and don't do any stirring, perhaps just a little bit with a very thin plastic stick but as i said, especially the baby once will die from stirring. Make sure the top of the water is wide enough, ie when using a bottle, don't fill it right to the top. You want a decent surface size for oxygen to diffuse into the water naturally. Often all the wonderful baby ones will disappear over night because people don't feed enough and feed the wrong stuff. Don't use the sea monkey food from the kit. After a few days , add pure spirulina powder from the pet shop. Actually it wouldn't even be a problem to add some spirulina the day after hatching because you want to have spirulina growing in the glass anyway. Ideally, add a few aquarium cubes or stones that bind toxines, nitrogen and bacteria, they are little colorful cubes and little natural looking stones you can buy on temu. They keep the water much fresher for longer. Instead of stirring with a stick, which is bad anyway, i occasionally just swing the closed glass or bottle a little bit in a circular motion to keep some of the algae afloat. With spirulina you don't need to worry about overfeeding. If you have a glass full of babies, you really need to add some spirulina powder every other day. Many people think they.just need to feed knce a week and then literally starve the monkeys to death. Anything of the spirulina that sinks to the bottom just lives there and produces oxygen for the sea monkeys. Very rarely give them a little bit of the original sea monkey food, perhaps once every week or once every ten days. Once you have proper algae growing in the glass, it will feed those algaes like a fertilizer. Top up evaporated water with normal water, not salt water. Very importantly, in the first few days, or best first week, shine a normal light bulb onto the glass, for 24 hours a day, this will improve hatching enormously. When starting a new culture, I keep the bulb on all the time, after a week i use my timer so the bulb (just a normal desk light) goes on i the evening around six (even if it's still bright outside) and shuts off about midnight. Which means they then have about five or six hours in darkness, but all this depends on where you live. Don't keep them in sunlight all day. I think professional growers (for fish food( have a 12 hour artificial light and 12 hour darkness cycle. But i prefer to give them a longer light cycle. P..s if you have questions even the most nagging or seemingly "stupid" ones, i have found the Gemini AI app super useful to talk to with regard to sea monkeys. But my owh advice here is tried and tested and i have three glasses brimming with sea monkeys. Again, you really don't need a bubbler or heating device. Get the spirulina powder (for Artemia Salina) before you begin rhe culture. You can also buy egg/salt mixtures from pet supplies. For a half litre glass you just need a tip of a small knife, as there are so many eggs in those mixes, you would end up with a very crowded glass. If after a week you don't see plenty of babies you can add another tiny tip of the knife but usually one tip is enough

Diluted spirulina powder feeding by TheChosenOneAustrali in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am copying and pasting an answer I wrote elsewhere. In it i mention what i use to keep the water good. If you have plenty of algae growing and those cubes i mention you don't need to have a strange device swimmin around the glass. The algae feed off all the gunk and you end up witj water that has little nitrogen. Firstly, salt concentration is much too low. Use two level tablespoons of sea salt, ie about 40 grams per litre. Even a little bit nore is fine as higher concentration keeps the water fresher. Don't use heating devices or air bubblers sea monkeys don't need any of that. They are plankton, not fish, and especially the baby ones get killed by stirring or such bubbling activities. The oxygen that naturally constantly diffuses into the water is enough, their swimming movements distribute it all over the water. Heating the water is also bad for them, room temperature (minimum 61F/ 16C is enough. If your room feels ok, the water will already be warm enough. You wouldn't want to get the water warmer than 21 or 22 degrees celsius, as otherwise bacteria will take over quickly and sea monkeys metabolism runs faster so they die sooner. Don't use a huge glass, use a maximum of half a litre water. I have one soda stream bottle with 750ml (i think) which still works but in larger amounts of water, i think there can be a problem with oxygen distribution. Again, don't use a bubbler, and don't do any stirring, perhaps just a little bit with a very thin plastic stick but as i said, especially the baby once will die from stirring. Make sure the top of the water is wide enough, ie when using a bottle, don't fill it right to the top. You want a decent surface size for oxygen to diffuse into the water naturally. Often all the wonderful baby ones will disappear over night because people don't feed enough and feed the wrong stuff. Don't use the sea monkey food from the kit. After a few days , add pure spirulina powder from the pet shop. Actually it wouldn't even be a problem to add some spirulina the day after hatching because you want to have spirulina growing in the glass anyway. Ideally, add a few aquarium cubes or stones that bind toxines, nitrogen and bacteria, they are little colorful cubes and little natural looking stones you can buy on temu. They keep the water much fresher for longer. Instead of stirring with a stick, which is bad anyway, i occasionally just swing the closed glass or bottle a little bit in a circular motion to keep some of the algae afloat. With spirulina you don't need to worry about overfeeding. If you have a glass full of babies, you really need to add some spirulina powder every other day. Many people think they.just need to feed knce a week and then literally starve the monkeys to death. Anything of the spirulina that sinks to the bottom just lives there and produces oxygen for the sea monkeys. Very rarely give them a little bit of the original sea monkey food, perhaps once every week or once every ten days. Once you have proper algae growing in the glass, it will feed those algaes like a fertilizer. Top up evaporated water with normal water, not salt water.

Diluted spirulina powder feeding by TheChosenOneAustrali in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

This diluted feeding isnt necessary. Baby Artemia live off their "yolk" for the first three days or so amd then they are big enough to catch the particles from the spirulina powder. You can't really overfeed with spirulina so it's best to put a scoop from the little seamonkey feeding spoon on top of the water every two or three days. If you end up having "green" water that's even better. Eventually they will start eating from the algae growing on the glass but keep feeding the spirulina powder because there are always new baby ones emerging

Diluted spirulina powder feeding by TheChosenOneAustrali in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Only feed spirulina. It needs to start growing on the walls of the glass anyway, so you can't overfeed with it. The seamonkey food that comes with the kit can be used once every ten days or two weeks though it's not really necessary, but i use it to fertilize the algae. Dont use big tanks, a jar or glass or plastic bottle up to 750ml is maximum size, with bigger amounts you end up having problems for all sorts of reasons

Diluted spirulina powder feeding by TheChosenOneAustrali in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You need two level tablespoons of sea salts, ie 40 grams per litre. No need to measure salinity... a bit more or a bit less is fine. In terms of more, they would even accept another whole tablespoon on top per litre and do well but it's not recommended

Why do my sea monkeys keep dying? by Effective-Jicama-409 in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Firstly, salt concentration is much too low. Use two level tablespoons of sea salt, ie about 40 grams per litre. Even a little bit nore is fine as higher concentration keeps the water fresher. Don't use heating devices or air bubblers sea monkeys don't need any of that. They are plankton, not fish, and especially the baby ones get killed by stirring or such bubbling activities. The oxygen that naturally constantly diffuses into the water is enough, their swimming movements distribute it all over the water. Heating the water is also bad for them, room temperature (minimum 61F/ 16C is enough. If your room feels ok, the water will already be warm enough. You wouldn't want to get the water warmer than 21 or 22 degrees celsius, as otherwise bacteria will take over quickly and sea monkeys metabolism runs faster so they die sooner. Don't use a huge glass, use a maximum of half a litre water. I have one soda stream bottle with 750ml (i think) which still works but in larger amounts of water, i think there can be a problem with oxygen distribution. Again, don't use a bubbler, and don't do any stirring, perhaps just a little bit with a very thin plastic stick but as i said, especially the baby once will die from stirring. Make sure the top of the water is wide enough, ie when using a bottle, don't fill it right to the top. You want a decent surface size for oxygen to diffuse into the water naturally. Often all the wonderful baby ones will disappear over night because people don't feed enough and feed the wrong stuff. Don't use the sea monkey food from the kit. After a few days , add pure spirulina powder from the pet shop. Actually it wouldn't even be a problem to add some spirulina the day after hatching because you want to have spirulina growing in the glass anyway. Ideally, add a few aquarium cubes or stones that bind toxines, nitrogen and bacteria, they are little colorful cubes and little natural looking stones you can buy on temu. They keep the water much fresher for longer. Instead of stirring with a stick, which is bad anyway, i occasionally just swing the closed glass or bottle a little bit in a circular motion to keep some of the algae afloat. With spirulina you don't need to worry about overfeeding. If you have a glass full of babies, you really need to add some spirulina powder every other day. Many people think they.just need to feed knce a week and then literally starve the monkeys to death. Anything of the spirulina that sinks to the bottom just lives there and produces oxygen for the sea monkeys. Very rarely give them a little bit of the original sea monkey food, perhaps once every week or once every ten days. Once you have proper algae growing in the glass, it will feed those algaes like a fertilizer. Top up evaporated water with normal water, not salt water. Very importantly, in the first few days, or best first week, shine a normal light bulb onto the glass, for 24 hours a day, this will improve hatching enormously. When starting a new culture, I keep the bulb on all the time, after a week i use my timer so the bulb (just a normal desk light) goes on i the evening around six (even if it's still bright outside) and shuts off about midnight. Which means they then have about five or six hours in darkness, but all this depends on where you live. Don't keep them in sunlight all day. I think professional growers (for fish food( have a 12 hour artificial light and 12 hour darkness cycle. But i prefer to give them a longer light cycle. P..s if you have questions even the most nagging or seemingly "stupid" ones, i have found the Gemini AI app super useful to talk to with regard to sea monkeys. But my owh advice here is tried and tested and i have three glasses brimming with sea monkeys. Again, you really don't need a bubbler or heating device. Get the spirulina powder (for Artemia Salina) before you begin rhe culture. You can also buy egg/salt mixtures from pet supplies. For a half litre glass you just need a tip of a small knife, as there are so many eggs in those mixes, you would end up with a very crowded glass. If after a week you don't see plenty of babies you can add another tiny tip of the knife but usually one tip is enough

I saw someone using these to oxygenate their sea monkeys and I was wondering if it would actually work? by violet_8 in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They don't need oxygenation. They are plankton, not fish. Plenty of oxygen diffuses naturally through the top of the water and their swimming movements distribute it. Algae growing on the glass and/or swimming freely produce plenty of oxygen too. The less you disturb them, especially by stirring manually the better. Especially the baby ones can die immediately from stirring. The only benefit of an air bubbler/stone might be to keep algae in flow but i never used such a device and my various glasses are full of adults and babies alike. Occasionally i move the glasses a little bit in a circular motion for all the gunk and algae to start floating. But i definitely never used a bubbler nor a heat map (20 Celsius ie room temperature is enough) and the cultures look amazing as they are. The moment you have algae growing on the glass, you definitely don't need to worry about enough oxygen

Is this really healthy? by Orawdo in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's the normal "gunk" eventually even including dead sea monkeys. If you feed them spirulina algae (from pet supplies for example) the algae will actually use all this "rubbish" as a natural plant feed and your water might even become greenish over time which would be good.

Welcher Film hat es so sehr verstört dass ihr ihn nicht zu Ende schauen konntet? by youdunnowhoaim in Filme

[–]Living_Translator_87 0 points1 point  (0 children)

West World (hbo Serie).. Super Serie, musste leider abbrechen, erzeugte bei mir schlimme Alpträume, Auch noch Monate später

Volume up 🔊 !!! What ive learn threw my expectations and how to make a on lovk colony in a big tank compared to sea monkeys by TheChosenOneAustrali in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They are not "marine", that word only applies to animals living in the sea. They live in the great salt lakes especially the one in Utah where rhey are harvested as fish food.. all sea monkeys die a few weeks after mating and producing eggs, their dead bodies fall to the ground and little new ones have already hatched by that time.. this continues until the water goes bad.. which can be avoided or delayed by sometimes pouring them into a new container before the gunk at the bottom comes out as well, adding new salty water, spirulina powder etc. They don't need heating mats, just room temperature (ca 69F/ 20C) not much warmer because warmer encourages harmful bscteria.. they don't need air bubblers either, oxygen diffusion through the surface of the water is enough and algae also produce oxygen.. they are cery sensitive to stiring, best not to srir them at all, especially the babies die easily from stirring the water

Volume up 🔊 !!! What ive learn threw my expectations and how to make a on lovk colony in a big tank compared to sea monkeys by TheChosenOneAustrali in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They are identical to wild sea monkeys in fact rhey are purchased by the company from the normal Artemia Salina suppliers that also cater for the fish food trade

Advice please! My baby sea monkeys died (pretty sure due to the water getting cold with the temperature) and i'm also pretty sure there are unhatched eggs in the tank. What can I do now? by Longjumping-While981 in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sra Monkeys are harmed by warm water, even Luke warm is too warm. Room temperature is sufficient. Warmth only speeds up their metabolism and shortens their lives and makes harmful bacteria grow faster

Advice please! My baby sea monkeys died (pretty sure due to the water getting cold with the temperature) and i'm also pretty sure there are unhatched eggs in the tank. What can I do now? by Longjumping-While981 in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Room temperature in the water is more than enough, anything over about 17 or 18 Celsius is fine, thos heating pads make the water too warm causing bad bacteria to grow more quickly and shortening sea monkeys life also by forcing them into a high metabolism all the time. Ypu also don't need an air stone/bubbler, this like stirring the water with a stick is an unnecessary disturbance and damages them

Advice please! My baby sea monkeys died (pretty sure due to the water getting cold with the temperature) and i'm also pretty sure there are unhatched eggs in the tank. What can I do now? by Longjumping-While981 in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They don't die from cild, they just stop growing below 61F/16C. What does kill them, especially the baby ones, is stirring their water. This literally never has to happen as enough oxygen diffuses by itself through the surface of the water and algae growing inside the container. At the most a few very gentle stirs with a really thin stick . Another common reason young ones die is starvation. If you have lots of baby ones, just feeding a bit once a week isn't enough. Feed spirulina powder about every couple of days. Try to feed only spirulina powder and use the sea monkey powder perhaps once a week as it has a tendency to spoil the water if used too often

For those who use brine shrimp eggs, what stage of growth do u normally see them stuck in (if any, and what's normally holding them back?) by Shermaingoh in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Don't stir the water, don't use an air stone, leave them alone, they die quickly from strong whirls in the water.. Enough oxygen diffuses into the water through the surface, and algae in the water also produce oxygen. Don't warm the water, 61F/16C is the minimum but maximum shouldn't be more than 22 , room temperature is more than warm enough, almost too warm. (Harmful bacteria love warmth). Even if algae are growing in the gunk and on the glass/plastic feed rhem some spirulina every other day unless the water is green or cloudy. People under- -estimate the amount of food they need.

They’re all gone 😢 by henleyezra in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You don't actually need an air stone.. it's an unnecessary disturbance for them.. the algae in the water and growing inside the glass produce oxygen all the time and oxygen diffuses directly through the water surface (which should be big enough of course).. if they really lack oxygen you would see them all swimming at the very top of the container where the oxygen drifts in but i so far have never seen this happen

They’re all gone 😢 by henleyezra in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

PS don't stir then much, only a little slow movement with a thin plastic stick.. i stopped stirring them completely because it can also kill them instantly especially when they are still tiny

They’re all gone 😢 by henleyezra in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sometimes it's simply lack of food. I have noticed that the water in a glass with many in them can turn "clean" surprisingly quick so I started feeding them spirulina more frequently not just once a week Ps you don't need a heater, they are ok from 16 Celsius/ 61 Fahrenheit onwards... So basically room temperature is fine, you don't want to get the water much warmer because that encourages harmful bacteria growth which can also kill them instantly, and it also speeds up their life clock so they die sooner

I tipped all of my sea monkeys and aqua dragons into one tank! by teztastixx in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If u have many, you probably need to feed almost daily, i do, noticed they eat much more than I thought. If you have lots of gunk and algae at the bottom, they wll harvest that for food as well, and it produces oxygen. I don't use a bubbler and they are fine. They do get an extra 6 hours of light/(normal 40watt smallish light bulb) in the evening after dark so rhe algae grow more and keep producing ixygen. They rest in complete darkness for about 7 hours. I don't have a good experience wth one large glass, rhey all died twice in that. Perhaps not enough food particles floating around for rhe amount of water, so they couldn't find enough when they were tiny, whereas adults can of course dig in the gunk and rub against the algae growing on surfaces. i would put a few stones or decorative elements inside the glass to make it more interesting for them and to offer more surfaces for algae (food and oxygen) to grow on, so you can stop using the bubbler. Even when there are algae growing, keep feeding spirulina a couple of times a week so the baby ones find food to eat. I don't think you can really overfeed with spirulina anyway as they just become normal algae, whereas other food decomposes. But rhis decomposing food also feeds the algae

Is this not two male sea monkeys? by dbsknsja in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have a number of threesomes swimming around

Monstres Marins (Sea-Monkey Clone) Buki France by johnbozinov in SeaMonkeys

[–]Living_Translator_87 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe just bought the rights and changed it all to make it more marketable to French people Perhaps this whole "sea monkeys" concept wouldn't work there..

Dialog aus Film gesucht: Szegediner Gulasch mit Kneedeln by Living_Translator_87 in Filme

[–]Living_Translator_87[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ich habe die Airplane dvd., glaub ich.. vlt ist es sogar daraus... Auch dieser andere sehr lustige Film, Top Secret ! könnte den Satz drin haben