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Sea Lettuce:

Sea Lettuce, Sea Ray Pachanga, Twenty Thousand Leagues Under The SeaRed ramshom snail: Excellent for any size aquarium. Source-Dealers. Description Curled like ram's horn; transparent; body coral-red. Reproduction Eggs deposited in round, flat mass of pink jelly attached to sides of aquarium. Fish are fond of these eggs and young snails. To rear, remove egg mass with sharp Knife or razor blade. Place mass in small balanced aquarium jar. When eggs hatch, keep small pieces of clean, fresh lettuce on water for young to feed on. Food Consists of minute animal life and dead and decaying matter; heavy feeder; keep piece of fresh lettuce leaf floating on water at all times. When tomatoes are in sea lettuceson, place small piece on lettuce leaf once per week.

Green food Essential; any fresh vegetable tops, such as carrot tops, outer green leaves of lettuce, parsley, celery; fresh weed growth, such as dandelion, duckweed, wild lettuce, shepherd's purse; generous amount once daily. Salt Excellent; place piece of salt brick in pen where pigs can lick it at will. Water Must be fresh, clean, and always available; use water bottle. REQUIRE OCCASIONALLY: Wet food Give stale bread soaked in milk weekly. Vegetables Small young carrots every few days; pigs are also fond of apples.

See Also Sea Ray Pachanga:




On The Other Hand See Twenty Thousand Leagues Under The Sea:

The epic voyage of HMS Challenger which led to the first true oceanic depth survey was made between 1872 and 1876. The Challenger expedition used soundings weights with tube-like cups to obtain a sample of the material forming the sea-floor. Thus, when Jules Verne (1828-1905) wrote Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea (1870),man first developed a systematic knowledge of the deep sediments.

Highly precise and accurate time information, used in celestial navigation, is not needed in piloting. Time is normally stated to the nearest hour and minute, with the possible exception of races and some navigation contests. In piloting, the 24-hour clock is used to express time of day; this simplifies recording and calculating by eliminating "a.m." and "p.m." suffixes. The day starts at midnight, 0000; noon is 1200; and afternoon times continue the sequence, with 3:30 p.m. being written as 1530. Hours and minutes are not separated by a colon. In the morning, 1000 is spoken as "ten hundred," not as "one thousand"; likewise, 2000 is "twenty hundred," not "two thousand." In nautical usage, the word "hours" does not follow the numbers.
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