spiderwoman
Active Member
Because it may crawl into your inflow pipe, get stuck and restrict the water flow into your sump... you can imagine the rest.
We did this a month ago and luckily we were still up and I was looking at the tank. The slight sloshing sound disappeared and the overflow was filling up with water FAST (we haven't painted the glass behind the overflow and I could see it happen).
We both jump up and run to the tank, open up the cabinet and sure enough the pump was almost sucking up air. We pulled the plug on everything and it took about 15 minutes to figure out what had happened. I unscrew the standpipe and sure enough the snail was in there. The snail was a large Turbo snail and big enough to clog the pipe.
So let the algae grow in your overflow
We sure learned our lesson fast.
We did this a month ago and luckily we were still up and I was looking at the tank. The slight sloshing sound disappeared and the overflow was filling up with water FAST (we haven't painted the glass behind the overflow and I could see it happen).
We both jump up and run to the tank, open up the cabinet and sure enough the pump was almost sucking up air. We pulled the plug on everything and it took about 15 minutes to figure out what had happened. I unscrew the standpipe and sure enough the snail was in there. The snail was a large Turbo snail and big enough to clog the pipe.
So let the algae grow in your overflow
We sure learned our lesson fast.