![Image](http://img1.imagehousing.com/32/ef406df8ca5417de849b857693527509.jpg)
This is my new RTC pond officially up and running. Filtration is temporarily held by an external filter. The filter media will be installed this monday
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon/biggrin.gif)
I wouldn't say this is a good idea. These guys are far more predatory than RTCs. They will, sooner or later, eat or attempt to eat your koi, especially the smallest ones - and the stress of being hunted sickens and eventually kills fish. My 60-80 cm TL TSNs hunted and killed plenty of fish even of comparable length but slimer, e.g., 1.5' Jardini arowana, 1.2' bullheads, 1.5' channel cats, 2' silver arowana, etc.. None others did, not 2'-3' RTCs, not 2'-3' RTCxTSN hybrids, not 3' channel cats, not 2' Leiarius marmoratus and pictus, only TSNs appear definitely the most predatory. All of these and 40 other big fish lived in a 40' x 6' x 3' indoor pond.gdc7688 wrote:I intend to add 2 shovelnose catfish to my collection after the bakki shower is installed.
Wow--especially regarding the S. jardini. In my experience, Jardini aros usually dominate whatever tank/pond they are in. Very nasty fish. I took care of one that was at least 30" TL housed in a 10' x 3' footprint tank. It would either eat or beat the crap out of anything else that we tried to keep in that tank: parrot cichlids, large tinfoil barbs, oscars, pacus, large panaque. I should have tried putting a TSN in that tank. Heheh!Viktor Jarikov wrote: My 60-80 cm TL TSNs hunted and killed plenty of fish even of comparable length but slimer, e.g., 1.5' Jardini arowana, 1.2' bullheads, 1.5' channel cats, 2' silver arowana, etc..
Viktor, you're talking about a duvet cover, yes? Some of us Americans do know what that is. I'd say don't use one of those mainly because of the zipper--it's something that can cause abrasions on the fish. I would recommend just using a king or queen sized bed sheet. Tranquilizers really aren't necessary as long as you can catch the fish in the sheet, grab all the corners, and close the sheet quickly. You can probably spread the sheet across the bottom of the pond, coax the catfish over it, and then grab the corners. Maybe even tie line to each corner. Once you block off the light, most fish will give up the fight.Viktor Jarikov wrote: VJ: I often would use soft cloth, like a pillow case. For your 1-meter RTCs, it'd have to be a blanket casesame idea only blanket size
(Americans never have these but all post-soviets know what that is). Anyhow, one can use a bed sheet or an extremely big and strong aqua-sock (the type of net, like a landing net but with a soft section in the middle and an opening in the end. One may try to anesthetize the fish a little with say clove oil but one has to be well-experienced with it or risk overdosing/losing the fish.