denisejoe
LIFE MEMBER
Were they dinner?We seen a tank similar to that one in France a week or so ago
It had some rather large lobsters in it
Probably cheaper to keep than your proposed occupants
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Were they dinner?We seen a tank similar to that one in France a week or so ago
It had some rather large lobsters in it
Probably cheaper to keep than your proposed occupants
There are a whole series of videos on YouTube following a Lobster called Leon who was 'rescued' from a seafood shopWere they dinner?
There are a whole series of videos on YouTube following a Lobster called Leon who was 'rescued' from a seafood shop
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Happy to put you up once a week!Clown Loach will be fine in the tank size you have. They are scaleless so medicating can be tricky, for white spot etc. Discus require frequent water changes.
I have some clown loach in a 750 litre 72 inch tank that I have had for more than 25 years, no special treatment required, as long as ph is okay.
They can grow up to 18 inch in length but rarely do so in a tank. Look fantastic in a large shoal.
I've been keeping tropical fish for more than 40 years. North Notts though, otherwise would help you set up etc.
Look forward to your full menu in due course!We do have a 18" Plec which could actually be battered!
No they will eat all the fishI was thinking along the lines of fancy rats.
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Hope you've got a big garden! Sorry to say it could be the first of many.Can we take a moment to send out thoughts to our upside down catfish and our red plec. RIP. We all held a service and it was beautiful. They lived a brief but good life. It was a bacterial infection and we think they didn’t suffer.
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If these were in the new tank, I'd be asking about the maturation process. I know that you've got an existing tank and experts helping you but the red plec looks pretty healthy for a bacteria infected corpse.Can we take a moment to send out thoughts to our upside down catfish and our red plec. RIP. We all held a service and it was beautiful. They lived a brief but good life. It was a bacterial infection and we think they didn’t suffer.
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Apparently it all stemmed from a Black Widow Tetra who got poorly and has spread it to the other Fish.If these were in the new tank, I'd be asking about the maturation process. I know that you've got an existing tank and experts helping you but the red plec looks pretty healthy for a bacteria infected corpse.
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Don't suppose you live near Trago MillsHope you've got a big garden! Sorry to say it could be the first of many.
There is so much to learn and easier (and cheaper) types of fish to keep. All the fish you've got are fish most new fishkeepers will progress to in a year or two.
It's not a simple hobby, the water parameters have got to be reasonable to give the fish a chance to thrive. If you keep large fish in an aquarium the one thing which can go wrong very quickly is that the ammonia levels can go off the scale, even faster if you overfeed your fish.
The other side of the coin which catches many novices out is having an aquarium which is too clean ie the filter isn't biologically mature.
Might be an idea to have a quarantine tank for new fish so you can observe them for a while before exposing the main tank's occupants.Apparently it all stemmed from a Black Widow Tetra who got poorly and has spread it to the other Fish.
Selling Motorhomes is a lot easier!
Anyway, 50% water change and a load of Fishy medication and apparently in 3 days they will be back fighting fit!