I had a arrow crab that loved hunting these things Bristol worms. Man I miss my tank I don’t miss the up keep but used to watch the critters being critters. Lights switching from day to night just beautiful.
I totally agree about watching the critters! I spend a lot of time in the dark, geeking out in front of the tanks with my flashlight and magnifying glass! It’s endlessly fascinating and it’s the reward I guess, for the time and effort....🤔
Hahaha that was so cool indeed .... my bristle star or whatever it is that's living in my candy cane is getting bigger but it still hasn't come out of the little hole it's living in 🤗🤗 love your little home made trap you did a good job 🤗🤗
Your bristle star is very desirable and chances are you won't wake up one day to find hundreds of them smothering and irritating your corals! I bet he travels around at night - have you ever checked after lights-out? Thanks for the comment, and for watching!
Reefgrrl yeah I'm constantly watching it and I've never ever seen it move ... I know it's getting bigger and instead of 4 legs it now has 6 and it's getting bigger and bigger .... maybe one day I'll wake up and it will have moved somewhere else
Hi. I had a similar problem and have built my own bristle worm trap. My findings: you don't need the straws. Just a container with a couple of holes in the side but most importantly is to put a substrate in the container because the bristle worms like to hide. You can use sand. I am using small pieces of terracotta tiles. Put some flakes in there close lid and leave a day or two. Take container out and rinse under tap. The hiding worms will detach from terracotta tiles, take them out with some pinches and set trap again.
I used the homemade method in my tank. Only difference is that I used plastic A&W Root Beer bottles (my thought was to encourage them to stay in the bottle longer), and I put frozen shrimp into the bottle before closing it. However I have a 175 gallon tank, and have the space for it.
@@Reefgrrl Only issue I had was with the Hermit Crabs. THey constantly would push around the containers during the day and scare the worms back into the rock.
I really enjoyed this video. I guess we share the same mindset I try to save the pods as well lol. Are these worms causing problems with your corals? I find mine beneficial cause pellets hit the sand bed sometimes and they eat them up. Anyway great video 👏🏾👌🏾
Thanks DC! I think the worms do a lot of good, but I have monster sized ones that crawl all over the Zoas and irritate them so they stay closed up for extended periods. I'd like to get a good number of them out of the tank and even if I took half out somehow, there would still be hundreds, I'm sure. It's a 4-yr-old tank so lots of time to develop a huge population. Thanks for watching!
Coral Vue has some nice stuff, those look like some decent size ones, you got any fish that you think maybe eat them? I'm pretty sure my Tanaka Pygmy Wrasse eats the hell out of these things...I never have problems with them. Dont see many of them around my tank. Thats cool you got them little buggers out tho.
It's just 29 gallons and I'm maxed out with bioload, or I'd get a wrasse of some type. I got a massive BW out the other day. I'm not hunting for them, but I will pull them if I see them out. They really are huge and they do irritate the corals. Thx for watching!
i bought a black one on amazon has a clown fish outline on top comes wit lid and rubber band to hold top on i bait with silver sides or fish pellets or both 6 holes and its small i have caught 100,s it amazing, happy hunting
how about taking your live rock slowly out of water in dip them in coral dip for 10 to 15 minutes ? I think this way you can get the ride of them pretty fast
That's a great idea but I can't get individual rocks out without taking down the whole structure. They are joined together with two-part epoxy. I have been thinking though, of taking the zoa rocks off the sand bed and putting the Zoas up higher on the rocks. That would leave me enough space to try trapping them in a different spot. Hmmmmm....
Nice trap, I've made one similar to yours and had some success. Ultimately, my wrasses solved the issue with an over-abundance of bristle worms. Be careful of the six lined wrasse, they can be buttheads. Nice video!
I would love to get a wrasse of some type but I'm at the biological max for fish in this tank. I almost did get a six-line but the LFS guy who knows my tank talked me out of it. Now I'm glad about that. Thanks for watching!
@@Reefgrrl they just had conversation on reef2reef about What would you never put in your tank again. 6 line wrasse was high up on the list of not to be in tank.. hope you didn't get one. Good read. This maybe a little late.
Hey Frank, I didn’t get a six-line. In the new tank, I have a green wrasse (halichoeres chloropterus) and I don’t have any plans to get any more wrasses, unless something happens to my spot breast angelfish pair (they’re bullies). Then, I might think about fairy wrasses.... Thanks for the info! Always good to know about this type of experience.
I think Arrow Crabs prey on them, and some wrasses. Arrow Crabs will also prey on fish though.... I have a green wrasse in my big tank and I rarely see bristleworms in there any more, even after lights out, so maybe he’s getting them when they’re little. 🤔
great video reefgrl but just wondered, did you bait either of the traps with a little Mysis or similar? I have a problem developing so may need some eradication plan of my own quite soon. Only spotted one yesterday but have 5 so far this evening now im looking for them... GRRRR what on earth next?. Nevertheless, I love it so bring it on reef pests... I will prevail hahahaha
Hahaha, they aren't bad for your tank, they are good, BUT when they become really huge, they irritate the corals. This is the problem I have. And yes, I did bait the inside of both traps, with freeze-dried krill. It was very smelly stuff. Good luck, but remember they do consume detritus in places other creatures can't reach...
Hey RG.. that's amazing.. I learn so much from you.. very cool. So where do they come from? Do you add them? I feel silly asking but I know nothing about reefs.. but I'm learning!
Hey Deb, thanks for watching! They are present in stuff that comes from the ocean and will survive if kept wet. This might be anything from rock, to coral skeletons. Even if just eggs are there, they hatch and start eating. So once they enter the aquarium trade, they are everywhere. I would feel confident in saying every saltwater aquarium has them unless wrasses obliterate their population by eating them. And even then it might just be that you're not seeing them. And no question is silly, believe me! This TH-cam community is really generous in sharing experience where they can. 😁
Hahaha, well, it takes a lot of mistakes over a long period to learn this stuff. I think the main characteristic is attention to detail followed closely by persistence and a sense of responsibility for the life under one's care. Which really, is just the same for FW. Come to think of it, I think the main difference is how expensive salt water tanks are to run! 🙄
Oh yeah I have heard that and the purchase of fish and corals can run up there too. I agree though. No matter what we undertake we have to be responsible and accountable. When you love something like this as we do it's comes easy =D
I always feel bad when those things come out with other stuff I take out for various reasons. I have zillions of them in there but I hate losing even one if I can help it. Thanks for watching!
Coral dip does make them come out of the rocks when the coral is being dipped but I don’t think it kills them, though they don’t like it. They are actually beneficial in the tank, because they eat detritus and leftover food. For me, they became a problem when they got really really big, and so numerous they were always crawling all over the corals and irritating them. I wouldn’t want to get rid of them completely, but I also don’t want them bothering the corals to where they won’t open. When I was cleaning up all my corals to move them from the nano tanks into the new tank, I removed any bristleworms that came out of hiding while I was doing the cleanup. I know though, that the new tank does have some, and I’m okay with that provided they don’t overgrow. Thanks for watching!
After seeing the size of some of the ones in my tank, i think i need to make a bristleworm trap, they're getting HUGE!!! i'm just using tweezers and yanking them out whenever i feed the fish.
I've tried that but man, does it ever creep me out when they break into pieces. It's a paradox: I want them out, they're gonna die, but I don't want them to suffer. 🤔
I've been lucky, only one decided to rip itself apart, the rest have come fairly willingly....and now live in my sump. Think i'll do an update on them soon so you can see their size!
That fits with what I've read about trying to place the trap within about an inch of where they live. I could probably get the store-bought trap pretty close to some major worm houses but the home made one is too bristly, takes up a lot of space in an awkward way. I'm going to keep working on it until I get at least a few big ones out of there. Thanks for watching!
Keep it simple right, just use a rock. LOL. Rocks work for anything, water level too high remove rocks, too low add rocks. too much light use rocks to create shade... Keep the videos coming Reefgrrl.
I used an Aquafina bottle. The dam bottle kept trying to float to the top..I wedged the straws between the rocks so it wouldn't float to the top. But the fish mess with the bottle and move it around..I need a bottle that will stay submerged under water..maybe I'm doing this all wrong
Might be too big a bottle, and the flow is pushing it around. The one I used is pretty small, and I was able to kind of brace the straws against the sand...🤔
Probably would, might be a bit difficult to get them out, hmmmm. Maybe two or three rocks that could be rotated through daily, leaving a couple of days for them to dry out. Though I wonder if the worms would emerge in that time, or just stay in the rock. But, thinking out loud here, if the rocks were put into hot freshwater, the worms would very likely come out. Food for thought! Thanks for watching!
Yeah, once in a while I can pluck out a whole one, but I hate when they break. And they also release a white cloud of stuff when stressed so that's gross too. Ugh.
the reason why both traps had inconsistent results was because having 2 traps at the same time, decreased their effectiveness. having food sources into 2 different places significantly decreased the chances of the bristle worms honing into to one either trap.
I had old rock crumble in a previous tank from being mined by bristleworms but overall, they are said to be valuable as part of the cleanup crew. Just not hundreds of them, and big, foot-long ones! Thanks for the comment and for watching!
Just want to say I got the same white slime issue that you did in my IM Nuvo 10 and it was a complete fucking nightmare. Thankfully I don’t have the bristleworm issue. Yet.
I’m sorry to hear that - I hope never to get that slime again. The bristleworms are only a problem when they get too big and there are so many that they irritate the corals to the point where they won’t open any more. Otherwise they’re a great cleanup crew. Thanks for watching. 👍🏻
The “mental pod” lol just felt like pointing that out XD ill try the rock method because i have some larger worms in my tank too that keep everything closed almost 24/7.
There was a winner and a looser! The worms got 1st place and won and sadly you lost. You should have used large frozen food and loosely wrapped it in netting like a bit of a pair of tights or net curtain etc then put it in the bottle and laid the bottle with the straws onto the rocks that way any bristle worms entering the bottle get caught up in the net and can be binned along with the netting then refilled the following night. But bristle worms are good for your tank as they clean up the ditritus and left over food in the little cracks in the rock work.
@@Reefgrrl thanks for the reply. I did read the comments and didn't see what I have said discussed yes terracotta tiles in the bottle or placing rolled up screen in your tank. But neither are what I said. But nevermind life moves on.
@@Reefgrrl I see now, I was going by my main point as I know that it works well as its what I do when they get really big as in a foot long and as thick as a finger.
Yep, I always start with dry rock and dip my frags, but that doesn't get rid of eggs. They are actually good for the tank, but mine are getting ridiculously big so I need to remove at least some of them. Thanks for watching!
add krill and cotton ball in homemade trap they get tangled up in the cotton and cant escape
I had a arrow crab that loved hunting these things Bristol worms. Man I miss my tank I don’t miss the up keep but used to watch the critters being critters. Lights switching from day to night just beautiful.
I totally agree about watching the critters! I spend a lot of time in the dark, geeking out in front of the tanks with my flashlight and magnifying glass! It’s endlessly fascinating and it’s the reward I guess, for the time and effort....🤔
Hahaha that was so cool indeed .... my bristle star or whatever it is that's living in my candy cane is getting bigger but it still hasn't come out of the little hole it's living in 🤗🤗 love your little home made trap you did a good job 🤗🤗
Your bristle star is very desirable and chances are you won't wake up one day to find hundreds of them smothering and irritating your corals! I bet he travels around at night - have you ever checked after lights-out? Thanks for the comment, and for watching!
Reefgrrl yeah I'm constantly watching it and I've never ever seen it move ... I know it's getting bigger and instead of 4 legs it now has 6 and it's getting bigger and bigger .... maybe one day I'll wake up and it will have moved somewhere else
Dude thank you for your video, I have SO freaking many in my 120.. taking them out manually just is NOT working. Thanks!
You can make you fit trap better. Use straws with flexible ends. You can adjust them to sit better on sand and rocks. Just a idea.
Interesting little project and really surprising winning for the trap. Nice work
Thanks for stopping by big guy! Yep, I'm using the rock these days and just getting what I can.
Hi. I had a similar problem and have built my own bristle worm trap. My findings: you don't need the straws. Just a container with a couple of holes in the side but most importantly is to put a substrate in the container because the bristle worms like to hide. You can use sand. I am using small pieces of terracotta tiles. Put some flakes in there close lid and leave a day or two. Take container out and rinse under tap. The hiding worms will detach from terracotta tiles, take them out with some pinches and set trap again.
Sounds ingenious!
You are very creative and I love your success. Thank you for sharing!!!
Thanks Larie!
I used the homemade method in my tank. Only difference is that I used plastic A&W Root Beer bottles (my thought was to encourage them to stay in the bottle longer), and I put frozen shrimp into the bottle before closing it. However I have a 175 gallon tank, and have the space for it.
I get a big kick out of hearing all the various solutions people have come up with! Thanks for the comment! 👍🏻
@@Reefgrrl Only issue I had was with the Hermit Crabs. THey constantly would push around the containers during the day and scare the worms back into the rock.
Lol, crabs are always interesting.
I really enjoyed this video. I guess we share the same mindset I try to save the pods as well lol. Are these worms causing problems with your corals? I find mine beneficial cause pellets hit the sand bed sometimes and they eat them up. Anyway great video 👏🏾👌🏾
Thanks DC! I think the worms do a lot of good, but I have monster sized ones that crawl all over the Zoas and irritate them so they stay closed up for extended periods. I'd like to get a good number of them out of the tank and even if I took half out somehow, there would still be hundreds, I'm sure. It's a 4-yr-old tank so lots of time to develop a huge population. Thanks for watching!
Hope you arent in california. That trap is illegal now hahaha
Coral Vue has some nice stuff, those look like some decent size ones, you got any fish that you think maybe eat them? I'm pretty sure my Tanaka Pygmy Wrasse eats the hell out of these things...I never have problems with them. Dont see many of them around my tank. Thats cool you got them little buggers out tho.
It's just 29 gallons and I'm maxed out with bioload, or I'd get a wrasse of some type. I got a massive BW out the other day. I'm not hunting for them, but I will pull them if I see them out. They really are huge and they do irritate the corals. Thx for watching!
Reefgrrl wow that's crazy, yeah i'd probably do the same if I was in ur position
i bought a black one on amazon has a clown fish outline on top comes wit lid and rubber band to hold top on i bait with silver sides or fish pellets or both 6 holes and its small i have caught 100,s it amazing, happy hunting
how about taking your live rock slowly out of water in dip them in coral dip for 10 to 15 minutes ?
I think this way you can get the ride of them pretty fast
That's a great idea but I can't get individual rocks out without taking down the whole structure. They are joined together with two-part epoxy. I have been thinking though, of taking the zoa rocks off the sand bed and putting the Zoas up higher on the rocks. That would leave me enough space to try trapping them in a different spot. Hmmmmm....
Nice trap, I've made one similar to yours and had some success. Ultimately, my wrasses solved the issue with an over-abundance of bristle worms. Be careful of the six lined wrasse, they can be buttheads. Nice video!
I would love to get a wrasse of some type but I'm at the biological max for fish in this tank. I almost did get a six-line but the LFS guy who knows my tank talked me out of it. Now I'm glad about that. Thanks for watching!
@@Reefgrrl they just had conversation on reef2reef about What would you never put in your tank again. 6 line wrasse was high up on the list of not to be in tank.. hope you didn't get one. Good read. This maybe a little late.
Hey Frank, I didn’t get a six-line. In the new tank, I have a green wrasse (halichoeres chloropterus) and I don’t have any plans to get any more wrasses, unless something happens to my spot breast angelfish pair (they’re bullies). Then, I might think about fairy wrasses.... Thanks for the info! Always good to know about this type of experience.
Do those Worms have any natural predators?
I think Arrow Crabs prey on them, and some wrasses. Arrow Crabs will also prey on fish though.... I have a green wrasse in my big tank and I rarely see bristleworms in there any more, even after lights out, so maybe he’s getting them when they’re little. 🤔
great video grrl and it goes to show you the best solution isn't always in a store. Awesome job.
Thanks Scott! Yes indeed, sometimes DIY fits the bill perfectly.
great video reefgrl but just wondered, did you bait either of the traps with a little Mysis or similar? I have a problem developing so may need some eradication plan of my own quite soon. Only spotted one yesterday but have 5 so far this evening now im looking for them... GRRRR what on earth next?. Nevertheless, I love it so bring it on reef pests... I will prevail hahahaha
Hahaha, they aren't bad for your tank, they are good, BUT when they become really huge, they irritate the corals. This is the problem I have. And yes, I did bait the inside of both traps, with freeze-dried krill. It was very smelly stuff. Good luck, but remember they do consume detritus in places other creatures can't reach...
Reefgrrl I may leave them until they grow too big then after all. ty
Hey RG.. that's amazing.. I learn so much from you.. very cool. So where do they come from? Do you add them? I feel silly asking but I know nothing about reefs.. but I'm learning!
Hey Deb, thanks for watching! They are present in stuff that comes from the ocean and will survive if kept wet. This might be anything from rock, to coral skeletons. Even if just eggs are there, they hatch and start eating. So once they enter the aquarium trade, they are everywhere. I would feel confident in saying every saltwater aquarium has them unless wrasses obliterate their population by eating them. And even then it might just be that you're not seeing them. And no question is silly, believe me! This TH-cam community is really generous in sharing experience where they can. 😁
Thanks RG.. I really appreciate your knowledge. It totally fascinates me the whole reef thing. Seems like you have to know soooo much!! =D
Hahaha, well, it takes a lot of mistakes over a long period to learn this stuff. I think the main characteristic is attention to detail followed closely by persistence and a sense of responsibility for the life under one's care. Which really, is just the same for FW. Come to think of it, I think the main difference is how expensive salt water tanks are to run! 🙄
Oh yeah I have heard that and the purchase of fish and corals can run up there too. I agree though. No matter what we undertake we have to be responsible and accountable. When you love something like this as we do it's comes easy =D
Unless you have a bobbit worm, bristle worms are generally beneficial.
Indeed they are, until they get so big that they start irritating corals to death. 🤷♀️
Lmao the mental pod at the end! Great video and very informative!
I always feel bad when those things come out with other stuff I take out for various reasons. I have zillions of them in there but I hate losing even one if I can help it. Thanks for watching!
You should try the screening material rolled into a ball. They cant escape in time.
Hmmm, but what if my shrimps went in there? I have 2 peppermints and a fire shrimp.
The screen is just balled up and wrapped with some rubber bands. I don't think a shrimp could get in.
I'll see what I can find in the basement for window screening, maybe give it a try. Thanks for the tip!
Great video! Good job on catching them!
Lol, thanks for watching!
I catch them with chopsticks, like Mr myagi.
what kind of alae food??just wafers?
It was pellets.
Cool bristleworm trap! Awesome video - I subscribed!
Thanks so much!
They are gross. Is there a way to prevent them from entering the tank? Like coral dip?
Coral dip does make them come out of the rocks when the coral is being dipped but I don’t think it kills them, though they don’t like it. They are actually beneficial in the tank, because they eat detritus and leftover food. For me, they became a problem when they got really really big, and so numerous they were always crawling all over the corals and irritating them. I wouldn’t want to get rid of them completely, but I also don’t want them bothering the corals to where they won’t open.
When I was cleaning up all my corals to move them from the nano tanks into the new tank, I removed any bristleworms that came out of hiding while I was doing the cleanup. I know though, that the new tank does have some, and I’m okay with that provided they don’t overgrow. Thanks for watching!
I have very good luck with my green traps. I used krill, they love that stuff.
Really cool video, well worth a try, Thanx !
Hahaha, it was fun! Thanks for watching!
After seeing the size of some of the ones in my tank, i think i need to make a bristleworm trap, they're getting HUGE!!! i'm just using tweezers and yanking them out whenever i feed the fish.
I've tried that but man, does it ever creep me out when they break into pieces. It's a paradox: I want them out, they're gonna die, but I don't want them to suffer. 🤔
I've been lucky, only one decided to rip itself apart, the rest have come fairly willingly....and now live in my sump.
Think i'll do an update on them soon so you can see their size!
That would be great!
Great Video. You might try pouring a bit of club soda on the rock to chase them out.
Good tip - I might try that! I dont like pulling them apart. Thanks!
I've seen it work on Eunicid Worms. Give us an update if you try it
Will do!
Maybe if you shoved the trap further into the rock work you may catch more.
That fits with what I've read about trying to place the trap within about an inch of where they live. I could probably get the store-bought trap pretty close to some major worm houses but the home made one is too bristly, takes up a lot of space in an awkward way. I'm going to keep working on it until I get at least a few big ones out of there. Thanks for watching!
Keep it simple right, just use a rock. LOL. Rocks work for anything, water level too high remove rocks, too low add rocks. too much light use rocks to create shade... Keep the videos coming Reefgrrl.
LOL Sweaty, you are so right! Thanks for watching!
I used an Aquafina bottle. The dam bottle kept trying to float to the top..I wedged the straws between the rocks so it wouldn't float to the top. But the fish mess with the bottle and move it around..I need a bottle that will stay submerged under water..maybe I'm doing this all wrong
Might be too big a bottle, and the flow is pushing it around. The one I used is pretty small, and I was able to kind of brace the straws against the sand...🤔
Imagine a bristle worm in your stomach
Ugh.
Uhhhh no
houdini bristle worms
keep at um you'll get them
do you think a rock with some small shallow holes drilled in the underside would catch more?
Probably would, might be a bit difficult to get them out, hmmmm. Maybe two or three rocks that could be rotated through daily, leaving a couple of days for them to dry out. Though I wonder if the worms would emerge in that time, or just stay in the rock. But, thinking out loud here, if the rocks were put into hot freshwater, the worms would very likely come out. Food for thought! Thanks for watching!
yeah hot freshwater would get them out and a couple of rocks on rotation sounds good.
Another really easy way is to use a pair of tweezers!! omg you should see some of the ones Ive pulled out longer than 7 inches!!!!
Yeah, once in a while I can pluck out a whole one, but I hate when they break. And they also release a white cloud of stuff when stressed so that's gross too. Ugh.
the reason why both traps had inconsistent results was because having 2 traps at the same time, decreased their effectiveness. having food sources into 2 different places significantly decreased the chances of the bristle worms honing into to one either trap.
Lol, I’m sure you’re right, and this wasn't in any way scientific. 😁
Great idea of that trap thank you
Thanks, I hope it helps if you have the same problem! 😬
Little bastards i had 15 come out of one ten dollar piece of petco liverock, that was my intro to bristleworms hahaha
Lol.
General Ackbar is amused...
😎 Please convey my thanks to the General for watching...
I have couple bristleworm in my tank, i never try to catch them. Someone say don't try to remove them and someone say remove them ;).
I had old rock crumble in a previous tank from being mined by bristleworms but overall, they are said to be valuable as part of the cleanup crew. Just not hundreds of them, and big, foot-long ones! Thanks for the comment and for watching!
👍
Your brave but next time don’t put the Bristol worm on the rock
Sera trap door works for me
The reef tank terminator!!!
But in the nicest possible way.....😈
Good video. Thanks
Thanks for watching!
i had made something similar like the bottle.. kool video.. :)
Yeah, it was very simple to make. Thanks for watching!
Just want to say I got the same white slime issue that you did in my IM Nuvo 10 and it was a complete fucking nightmare. Thankfully I don’t have the bristleworm issue. Yet.
I’m sorry to hear that - I hope never to get that slime again. The bristleworms are only a problem when they get too big and there are so many that they irritate the corals to the point where they won’t open any more. Otherwise they’re a great cleanup crew. Thanks for watching. 👍🏻
Nice hack!
The “mental pod” lol just felt like pointing that out XD ill try the rock method because i have some larger worms in my tank too that keep everything closed almost 24/7.
save the copopod 😂
I did! 😁
There was a winner and a looser! The worms got 1st place and won and sadly you lost. You should have used large frozen food and loosely wrapped it in netting like a bit of a pair of tights or net curtain etc then put it in the bottle and laid the bottle with the straws onto the rocks that way any bristle worms entering the bottle get caught up in the net and can be binned along with the netting then refilled the following night. But bristle worms are good for your tank as they clean up the ditritus and left over food in the little cracks in the rock work.
Hey Martin, thanks for your comment - I think if you read the other comments, you’ll see this has been discussed. 👍🏻 Thanks for watching!
@@Reefgrrl thanks for the reply. I did read the comments and didn't see what I have said discussed yes terracotta tiles in the bottle or placing rolled up screen in your tank. But neither are what I said. But nevermind life moves on.
Sorry - I meant about bristleworms being beneficial. I should have been more clear.
@@Reefgrrl I see now, I was going by my main point as I know that it works well as its what I do when they get really big as in a foot long and as thick as a finger.
put your rock into VERY hot water...
Really mad of this video loose of wind
Ummmm, what?
Tq to reply... Actually video is nice but technically its not working for this...
omg thats a horror movies ! thats why i used dry rock and dipped all my frags
Yep, I always start with dry rock and dip my frags, but that doesn't get rid of eggs. They are actually good for the tank, but mine are getting ridiculously big so I need to remove at least some of them. Thanks for watching!
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