Post pictures of your beloved catfish aquaria here. Also good for pictures of your (cat)fish rooms or equipment discussions. If you are posting pictures of identified catfish, please do so in the appropriate husbandry and reproduction forum above.
"My journey is at an end and the tale is told. The reader who has followed so faithfully and so far, they have the right to ask, what do I bring back? It can be summed up in three words. Concentrate upon Uganda."
Winston Churchill, My African Journey
Interests: African catfishes and oddballs, Madagascar cichlids; stoner doom and heavy rock; old school choppers and riding them, fantasy novels, travelling and diving in the tropics and all things nature.
however, my favorite non-catfish would also love it
so many green things to eat in there.......
and my second to favorite non-catfish would be found next to it in numbers, dried up.
great tank for Syno's, though. they'd love all the woodwork and plants to hide in
the one drawback these tanks have is that you can only keep very boring fishes in them.
tiny tetra's, tiny barbs, the occasional Angelfish; that's about it
any catfish bigger than an Otocinclus would muck it up.
it's almost exactly the newer better version of what we used to have here in the Netherland; the "Holland planted aquarium".
the 2.0 sort of.
for over 40 years Dutch fish keeping has been in the stranglehold of that philosophy;
if you were in a club or a tank contest, the only way to reach the upper levels was to make the tank like that
dissent was completely unacceptable and wouldn't be tolerated.
it's not a coincidence the Dutch trade has been allergic for anything catfishy for half a century, that was born out of the rock-hard conviction that "ALL catfish are disruptive and the dig up and destroy plants".
I was referring to the hardware set up rather than the internals.
Personally I wouldnt have plants in it at all.
Just the bogwood,
How about a list of what you would keep in there?
Mine is simple, I would have a good size shoal of Uaru and a couple of Megladoras.
One more bucket of water and the farce is complete.
I envy anyone who can afford and have the space for very large tanks.
If I could I would have a dozen tanks of 500 to 1000 gallons.
They would all be stocked with mainly different species and especially attractive varieties of wild Discus.
Getting pairs of wild Discus becomes easier when you keep them in very large tanks.
I am part of a subset of Discus hobbyists who specialize in keeping and breeding wild type Discus and I have absolutely no interest in the man made domestic forms of Discus. They have gone the way of the Goldfish and I barely recognize them as Discus.
I began breeding wild Discus in 1969 and they remain my favorites.
I would probably also stock one lightly planted large tank with Pterophyllum altum Angelfish.
It would be my dream display tank fish room.
Comfy furniture and it would have a small kitchen so I could also cook.
I would have to have a separate fish room which is more utilitarian for breeding my fishes.
I do like having one large planted South American fish tank containing mostly different Characins, a few Dwarf Cichlids and some different catfish.
I actually already changed my 125 gal to such a tank early last year.
I do not like to be dependent on CO2 so I take a lower tech approach than T. Amano. I use pretty heavy duty filtration systems and for individual large display tanks I build my own high volume wet/dry filter system and also run a Canister filter too.
Matt30 wrote:Grate idea grokefish -I would have sand substrate then large rocks, huge branches of Sumatran Driftwood,and fill it with Parancistrus nudiventris.
I rekon I am more likely to get a tank like that than parancistrus nudiventris in numbers I cant find them anywhere I can realistically get to
One more bucket of water and the farce is complete.
That's more like it! but what about a few s. Contracta instead or perhaps even s.acanthoperca, then throw in a couple dozen of liauchenoglanis thomasi , mix with a number of tetracamphilius angustifrons, a smattering of chiloglanis productus and jobs a good un.
Alternatively ditch the decor and go for a pair of pardiglanis if the width is big enough....oh we can dream
Lou: Every young man's fantasy is to have a three-way. Jacob: Yeah not with another fu**!ng guy! Lou: It's still a three-way!
corybreed wrote:I could live with one tank if that was the one.
Mark
I couldn't. I have about 9 tanks currently, about to purchase a 6ft. My three main ones live with me in my office at University. Student's are always taken aback when they see the tanks in here.
I do like the size of the tank, but I think I would change it slightly in terms of setup/planting, etc.
Wow nice tank. As stated though you could do so much more with the decor in there. Stocking it would be expensive but well worth it.must have a powerful heater and filter to run that too lol
Matt30 wrote:Grate idea grokefish -I would have sand substrate then large rocks, huge branches of Sumatran Driftwood,and fill it with Parancistrus nudiventris.
I rekon I am more likely to get a tank like that than parancistrus nudiventris in numbers I cant find them anywhere I can realistically get to
grokefish, after about a year and a half of trying to obtain x1 Parancistrus nudiventris, after mine mysteriously died, it looks like I have x3 turning up,I am only after x1,so if they do all turn out to be Parancistrus nudiventris I will PM you,I know this is your favorite Cat.
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