. In this side of the river there was a lot of saw grass. This is nasty stuff and we both copped a lot of leg grazes including some that saw blood. Solution is long trousers.
The other picture is a second species of barb from this area.
Jools
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 12 May 2011, 14:47
by Shane
Greetings from Fort Portal! We had a great day yesterday collecting south of Kampala. This morning we drove 3.5 hours east to Fort Portal. The only collecting so far was a beautiful mountain stream running from Rwenzori (Mountains of the Moon). Habitat was a cool (65F ish) fast flowing stream with clear water. This looked like a Chaetostoma stream might in South America and several watching children told us there were no fish in the stream. After several pulls we were going to move on when we turned up a gorgeous killie living along the stream's margins. Once we had the right habitat down we collected over a dozen in 10 minutes. Beautiful n]scenary today driving along the Great Rift.
The plan for tomorrow is to head south from Fort Portal to the Kazinga Channel between the Rift Lakes George and Edward.
Sorry we have been so bad about posting updates and photos, but as you might imagine, when you are 20 km from the Congo/Uganda border it is almost impossible to get any kind of internet connectivity.
-Shane
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 12 May 2011, 15:06
by Shane
Thankfully, we have wifi internet here at our hotel in Fort Portal. Although it's been down for couple of days, it's up now!
Some pics from back near Lake Vic: All ID suggestions welcome (I know what the Clarias is)!
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 12 May 2011, 15:07
by Shane
Video of the Killie. .
Jools
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 12 May 2011, 15:10
by Shane
Some others from the ditch.
Jools
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 12 May 2011, 15:26
by Shane
Mountains of the Moon killie.
-Shane
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 12 May 2011, 18:18
by Richard B
Nothing like chiloglanis or any amphiliids? I was getting my hopes up if there was something looking like a chaetostoma stream....
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 12 May 2011, 19:04
by kruseman
The last killie is a Hypsopanchax, probably H. modestus.
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 13 May 2011, 09:29
by Yann
Hi!!
it is very nice indeed!!
Look you have a fun time, even if the insects are not on Jools' side!!:-(
The fish is indeed a Pseudocrenilabrus multicolor victoriae...a nice male
typical Haplochromine behaviour!!
Cheers
Yann
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 13 May 2011, 15:26
by Jools
Thanks for the IDs. We collected hillstreams today, but all we found as far as catfishes go is a hillstream Clarias!
Meantime, a couple of not-for-the-nano-tank fishes. The lungfish breathed out when it was on the ground and it sounded like a horse.
Jools
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 13 May 2011, 18:24
by Yann
Wow!!!
this is what I call huge!!
need some serious tank for that!! the shipping price would be quite important as well!!
Cheers
Yann
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 16 May 2011, 15:51
by Shane
Got Jools off to the airport this morning and he will be home this evening (GMT). Great trip and great fun. Now I just need about 18 hours of uninterrupted sleep.. and a new liver.
-Shane
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 16 May 2011, 23:38
by Firestorming
Are you going to give us a spoiler on what is going home with him?
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 18 May 2011, 22:25
by Jools
Well, getting the fish through import/border in T5 was easier than expected! I turned up, my luggage did, the fish were checked and off we went. I wish it was easier for the Ugandan Sherry and Waragi (a gin like spirit) I brought back, I had to check it in at the UK border and that made have to rush to get the connection. So, OK to fly into London with it in my hand luggage but clearly a risk to fly from London to Edinburgh the same! Grrrr.
Actually, the whole experience in the airport in Entebbe was very relaxed. It felt like a small regional airport, 4 gates I think. No big queues, everything went like clockwork. The flight back was half full at best and I had checked in online to an exit seat with tonnes of legroom and no one sitting next to me. I used the 8 hours to watch a movie, edit all the images from the trip and finish off a new level of Angry Birds Rio. That, some decent food and a couple of glasses of wine made it a very pleasant afternoon!
Anyway, I am pleased to report zero losses after two days in the fishroom I have:
8 "African checkerboard barbs". 1"
2 "African silvershark barbs". 1"
4 "African three spot barbs". 0.5-1"
7 Clarias alluaudi 1.5-2"
1 Clarias ? 2"
2 Pr Hypsopanchax modestus 1.5"
2 Pr Pseudocrenilabus philander victoriae. 1"
5 UN Lampeyes that are plain but eat flakefood from Lake Nawampasa drainage. 1"
6 Baby cichlids from the Lake Nawampasa drainage, might be spectacular Haps, more likely I have some w/c Tilapia! 0.25"-0.5"
4 or 5 Lacustricola bukobanus .75"
11 Lacustricola sp `Rusty` .75"
and a baby leech (3-10mm depending on mood) which I have set-up a nano (it's a small show tank) aquarium for!
Lacustricola eat frozen lobster eggs, which is good to know, everything else is on flake.
Are there any in particular you want to see pics of?
Jools
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 18 May 2011, 23:12
by Firestorming
All of the above! Mate whatever pics you put up I am sure folks will appreciate, especially those of us who rarely if ever have the chance to see these species.
in mountain streams as long as they were not running too fast, in these clear streams they were a length of 6-10 cm and there were many of them seemingly at a certain time of the year, migratory maybe?
Also mentions that the ones he had captured or raised after capture never got past 16cm TL, and seriously doubts the 35 cm size thinking that may have come from confusion with other Clarias. This sounds like a perfect sized Clarias.
Took a schisto test and it came back negative, but I dosed with Biltricide anyway since I'll be leaving Uganda in a few weeks.
-Shane
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 04 Jul 2011, 22:51
by Firestorming
Shane wrote:I'll be leaving Uganda in a few weeks.
-Shane
Is this for good or a "holiday"?
I really enjoy reading about your travels.
Re: Jools and Shane's Uganda Adventures
Posted: 05 Jul 2011, 06:06
by Shane
For good. We left the States in 2000 and have been gone since (Venezuela, Colombia, Mexico, South Africa, Uganda). Feels like it is time to go back for a year or two. My daughter is five and has never lived there, she was actually born in Mexico City. She needs some exposure to the US and her extended family.
We are also truthfully excited to have some developed world living for a spell. Book stores, high speed internet, international foods, convenience, etc. Instead of going to five stores to find the one lightbulb to be had; you can go to one store and choose from 5 lightbulbs! Oh and a break from malaria, schisto tests, giardia bouts, etc.
I'll still have plenty of travels, they will just be chasing madtoms instead of Synos and minnows instead of tetras.
-Shane