It’s easy to forget an air bubbler when you’re setting up a themed tank, but this guy won’t let you down. The pirate captain doubles as an air bubbler. But then I absolutely had to have it for my tank. You probably didn’t know you needed a ghost pirate sea captain until you saw this. Maybe place this booty inside an Aquarium Cave? Air-Driven Skeleton Pirate Captain It will also work well with other pirate ship aquarium decorations in larger tanks. This treasure chest measures 5.5″ x4″ x5.25.” If your tank is too small for anything else, this sunken treasure chest has all the elements you need to express the theme of your tank. If your tank has neon-colored elements already, it will fit in perfectly. This decoration can bring a splash of color to your tank and is a little kitschy, but it’s fun. Meanwhile, seaweed and sea anemones have carried on living around it all. The treasure chest wood is rotting away and is spilling out jewels, goblets, bars of gold, gold doubloon, and even a genie’s lamp upon the ocean floor. If a pirate ship went down, their treasure chest certainly went down with it. Thus, it’s perfect in a tank of any size. However, at 2.5″ x1″ x2,” it’s small enough to fit in the palm of your hand and won’t take up a lot of room. The cannon is smaller than the description lists. There is a small opening in the pirate cannon, but it’s only about ¼ of an inch, which is too small for fish to use to hide. Because it’s a greyish-black color, it fits in well with almost any color decor you have in your tank. I like to bury mine a bit in my rock substrate to make it look like it’s on its way to reclamation from the sea. It can add character to the overall feel of your pirate tank. Having a pirate cannon in your tank is an absolute blast. However, keep in mind that it will be out of scale with the other decor from this list. It could be a part of the overall pirate decor theme in a larger tank. In a small tank, this could be your main pirate-y decoration. The skull measures 4.7″ x5.5″ x4.9″ So, it’s a little smaller than a real skull. Is it really a pirate without an eye patch? This pirate skull still has its doo-rag on over its beaded dreads, has a knife in what is left of its jaw, and is wearing an eye patch. Of course, a pirate skull is creepy on its own, but it’s extra cool to watch fish swim in and out of its eye and nose sockets. I like the ambiance a pirate skull adds to a tank. It’s 8.3″ long x 3.4″ wide x 7.3″ high, which will even fit in a fairly small tank. The ship is just the right size-not too big and not too small. I have aquarium lights with multi-colored options, so I like to adjust them to make the ship glow in eerie colors. Some of my fish like to hang out on the deck as well. I love the way it looks when my ember tetras swim through them. The sails are tattered with holes in them just big enough for your fish to swim through. I’m in love with this one because it’s dark and eerie. You absolutely can’t have a pirate ship aquarium without a pirate ship. But, there are fish swimming in and out of the torn sails of the ship. Imagine a sunken pirate ship deep down in Davey Jones’s Locker full of ghostly pirate skeletons. My aesthetic for a pirate ship aquarium is more on the dark side.
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