So it took several weeks, but the new tank is paid for. I also built the cabinet. I wasn't about to pay 370.00 for one. The lumber was about $35.00 and I bought a miter saw. To be fair, the cabinet is not level. It's amazing how much shift 1/8th of an inch can show over 6 feet. I had to redo my entire room and have made room for a 12 foot movie screen for my projector. After moving the fish, they have finally settled in and I have regained their trust from the 10 foot move in a net. One of my fish, a goyder rainbow had a pipple. He survived and the tank is healthy. Mostly, I am over the Christmas hump and the bank account is moving forward once again.
My Fish:
Goyder Rainbow (4)
Australian Rainbow (3)
Turquoise Rainbow (3)
Bosemani Rainbow (3)
Iranian Red Rainbow (4)
Yellow Rainbow (1)
Roseline Shark (2)
Betta (7)
Killifish (2)
The newest members are the Iranian Red Rainbow Fish. They are just babies and are hyperactive. The sharks are also paired. The two cost $35.00, but are now worth $75.00 each based on the size and from the prices I see at the store.
Looking back on April 14, 2010:
The entire planet was watching the oil leak and it's camera. However I was watching something else. Asteroid 2010 GA6. It was at close approach. That day, Eyjafjallajökull erupted and a meteor was seen over the mid-west heading in a NE trajectory when it landed in Wisconsin within minutes if each other. I had witnessed a meteor fall that matched up with an asteroid at close approach a few times before, but never was there also a major volcanic eruption.
If anyone ever looked into asteroids, comets, meteors and the like, beit reading about the destruction of the dinosaurs, or the comet that broke apart and slammed into Jupiter then you're accustomed to the "imposed view", or the order of events when something from space strike the planet. This imposed view is issued by documentaries and movies alike. The sequence of this view is as follows;
Imposed View:
1. Asteroid or Coment makes close approach
2. Meteor or fireball seen streaking across the sky
3. Impact throws ejecta into the air
The view from similar, yet real event April 14, 2010:
1. Asteroid 2010 GA6 at Close Approach
2. Eyjafjallajökull throws ejecta into the air
3. Meteor and fireball streak across mid-west
This view is completely different from the imposed view. It's a new view of an impact based on circumstantial evidence. However, due to some flaws not only of my own, but within the science community, I am not willing to commit to impact. Instead, the meteor was ejecta from the volcano, and it was heading back to where it came from. Kind of like after the big bang, the universe is said to return back to it's original state.
After finding VSL and particle light waves my original view still remains open. When first observed by me, the Asteroid appeared a few days after a CME was released by Sun. I swore it was a gamma ray.
Thanks for reading and remember gravity can effect space and time.
William