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7,010 Posts
Let's put some positive energy back into the hobby. Too many negatives...
I start first. I used to love African cichlids; mainly the Lake Tanganyika cichlids. They have so many body shapes, behaviors, color, and variety. I love them all. I was especially proud that I wrote a journal with my breeding Kitumba frontosa and later a breeding community Tanganyika tank journal. Back then, most people will do one or two types of breeding fish in a single tank. I did an easy one with 4-5 types of fish in a single 75g. It was fun and very biotope like. However, as the Lake being explore and fish being export heavily and breeding programs setup from farms to home, there is nothing really interesting and exotic I can get my hands on. Shipping cost is another factors that I no longer want to do them. So I decide to move my interest to South America.
Because we are in BC, our water is perfect for them. I no longer have to dose constantly for my African tanks anymore. Water change is easy. And although the SA fish lacks of color, but the number of types of fish are far greater from small tetra, to geophagus to corys to plecos to stingrays... The list is just endless. And it is far more fun to setup SA biotope for me anyway. I love the driftwood look. A little bit of easy low light plants just to add a dash of green here and there. The tanning from the wood adds even more color to the water... Just imagine, part of the river in your living room. It is amazing...
I can't take all the credit. I got the idea from James; owner of Rainforest. Some people might still remember him. He has a 6 footer in the front center of the store with hundreds and thousands of cardinals tetra in there with a few exotic plecos. Sure he had some very nice wild discus in the holding tanks at the back, a few altum angels holding tanks on the other side, and many other types of fish tanks in the store. But I always found myself staring at those cardinals in that 6 footer tank. I think that is when I decided I would go from monster fish tank with only a few monster fish to monster fish tank with hundreds and thousands of smaller community fish setup. And I love it; so does most of my customers who converted and convinced that a bigger tank doesn't mean you have to put bigger fish in there. Small community fish are just as nice if not better.
Please share yours...
I start first. I used to love African cichlids; mainly the Lake Tanganyika cichlids. They have so many body shapes, behaviors, color, and variety. I love them all. I was especially proud that I wrote a journal with my breeding Kitumba frontosa and later a breeding community Tanganyika tank journal. Back then, most people will do one or two types of breeding fish in a single tank. I did an easy one with 4-5 types of fish in a single 75g. It was fun and very biotope like. However, as the Lake being explore and fish being export heavily and breeding programs setup from farms to home, there is nothing really interesting and exotic I can get my hands on. Shipping cost is another factors that I no longer want to do them. So I decide to move my interest to South America.
Because we are in BC, our water is perfect for them. I no longer have to dose constantly for my African tanks anymore. Water change is easy. And although the SA fish lacks of color, but the number of types of fish are far greater from small tetra, to geophagus to corys to plecos to stingrays... The list is just endless. And it is far more fun to setup SA biotope for me anyway. I love the driftwood look. A little bit of easy low light plants just to add a dash of green here and there. The tanning from the wood adds even more color to the water... Just imagine, part of the river in your living room. It is amazing...
I can't take all the credit. I got the idea from James; owner of Rainforest. Some people might still remember him. He has a 6 footer in the front center of the store with hundreds and thousands of cardinals tetra in there with a few exotic plecos. Sure he had some very nice wild discus in the holding tanks at the back, a few altum angels holding tanks on the other side, and many other types of fish tanks in the store. But I always found myself staring at those cardinals in that 6 footer tank. I think that is when I decided I would go from monster fish tank with only a few monster fish to monster fish tank with hundreds and thousands of smaller community fish setup. And I love it; so does most of my customers who converted and convinced that a bigger tank doesn't mean you have to put bigger fish in there. Small community fish are just as nice if not better.
Please share yours...