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Welcome to see my longnose cory pictures!
Posted: 21 Aug 2004, 19:35
by jackson827
This is my cory tank. Is it cool?!
Posted: 21 Aug 2004, 19:37
by jackson827
My C.fowleri group swim together.
Posted: 21 Aug 2004, 19:38
by jackson827
This one is more clear.
Posted: 21 Aug 2004, 19:40
by jackson827
They are god of eating!!
Posted: 21 Aug 2004, 19:41
by jackson827
My big C.semiaqualus and C. fowleri
Posted: 21 Aug 2004, 19:46
by jackson827
My C.semiaqualus.
Posted: 21 Aug 2004, 19:49
by jackson827
My unknown species.
C92 or C116?
Posted: 21 Aug 2004, 20:11
by corybreed
Looks like a happy bunch of Corys.
Mark
Posted: 23 Aug 2004, 17:15
by madattiver
great collection of corys you have there... where abouts in canada are u located.. i am curious because i have not seen any of those types in any of my lfs here in saskatoon.
Posted: 23 Aug 2004, 17:16
by benny
And very well fed too!!
Perhaps ready for breeding soon?
Cheers,
Posted: 23 Aug 2004, 17:29
by sammich
It looks awfully bare. You should get some plants or something.
Posted: 24 Aug 2004, 03:24
by jackson827
hi, madattiver, I live in Vancouver and got these lovely cories locally.
They are very very hard to get, I am so lucky to have them.
Posted: 25 Aug 2004, 22:47
by macquatic
Your fish look fine and healthy.
May I suggest some sort of cover ie plants, bogwood, caves etc. The fish will feel more secure and more likely to breed if they are mature.

Mac.
Posted: 27 Aug 2004, 08:16
by jackson827
I will get some good bogwood, but it is hard.
Because these guys are not common cories!! They are more actice and aggresive to each other!!
If you ever kept them before, you will know how different they are.
I need to provid lots of swim space for them, this is why i didn't put any thing to let them hide.
They are all happy and even know when I feed them.
Posted: 01 Sep 2004, 12:58
by zac08
I guess most of the time, they'd be hiding under the filters???
If this is so, then they'd need some places to hide from the lights, give them some room and they'd feel more at ease and may breed soon too.... try some fast growing plants for cover... and some moss for them to lay the eggs on....
Mebbe you could see some breeding action soon...
Posted: 01 Sep 2004, 21:33
by Jools
Actually, you'd be surprised how often corydoras are found where there are no plants. I'd add floating plants or plants that grow above or into the tank to make it most like a natural situtation. That also means you should get fewer turf disputes; as mentioned above most long nose corys can get really quite territorial in that size of tank.
Floating plants might also unlock the door in terms of spawning sites too.
Jools
Posted: 04 Sep 2004, 17:56
by jackson827
Jools wrote:Actually, you'd be surprised how often corydoras are found where there are no plants. I'd add floating plants or plants that grow above or into the tank to make it most like a natural situtation. That also means you should get fewer turf disputes; as mentioned above most long nose corys can get really quite territorial in that size of tank.
Floating plants might also unlock the door in terms of spawning sites too.
Jools
Thank you Jools.
Posted: 04 Sep 2004, 18:08
by jackson827
zac08 wrote:I guess most of the time, they'd be hiding under the filters???
If this is so, then they'd need some places to hide from the lights, give them some room and they'd feel more at ease and may breed soon too.... try some fast growing plants for cover... and some moss for them to lay the eggs on....
Mebbe you could see some breeding action soon...
Actually, most of time they swim and searching food by digging sand gravel, i will try to breed them during this winter.
Posted: 04 Sep 2004, 19:41
by zac08
jackson827 wrote:zac08 wrote:I guess most of the time, they'd be hiding under the filters???
If this is so, then they'd need some places to hide from the lights, give them some room and they'd feel more at ease and may breed soon too.... try some fast growing plants for cover... and some moss for them to lay the eggs on....
Mebbe you could see some breeding action soon...
Actually, most of time they swim and searching food by digging sand gravel, i will try to breed them during this winter.
Cool.... do note the water changes and also cover for the fishes when they want to lay eggs
Posted: 04 Sep 2004, 23:13
by jackson827
zac08 wrote:jackson827 wrote:zac08 wrote:I guess most of the time, they'd be hiding under the filters???
If this is so, then they'd need some places to hide from the lights, give them some room and they'd feel more at ease and may breed soon too.... try some fast growing plants for cover... and some moss for them to lay the eggs on....
Mebbe you could see some breeding action soon...
Actually, most of time they swim and searching food by digging sand gravel, i will try to breed them during this winter.
Cool.... do note the water changes and also cover for the fishes when they want to lay eggs
Thank you Zac! I will do it.