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punman

Calgary & Area Member
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Posts posted by punman

  1. I have had tropheus for 10 months.

    I got 30 'cause I was told you will lose some with time.

    People said "buy medication and use it at once."

    I never bought any medications, ordered 30 -1.5 inch fry from Spencer in Winnipeg in May 2008 and they started breeding two months later.

    I feed only NLSpectrum and have never medicated and never lost a fish as they matured.

    They spent time in a 90 gallon and 180 gallon tank.

    I pared the group down to 22 fish and they will be permanently in the 90 gallon now.

    One-third water changes every 10 days and twice a day feedings.

    Maybe I am lucky - I don't know.

    I am no expert but I would say don't add other cichlid types and make sure you are committed to the water changes. If you know you will be lazy on that, or not sure, then start with cheaper, hardier cichlids. I have not had problems but it sounds like when you do have tropheus problems, they can go bad fast. If you have at least 15 fish, that is quite a loss and they generally are not cheap fish.

  2. If you want to raise fry you could put the fry in their own tank, but for two fish I doubt I would bother.

    If you are serious about the idea, next time isolate the female in her own tank or strip the fry after 3 weeks from the mother.

    I'd probably just leave the 2 fry and let them fend for themselves although they might get eaten.

  3. I started with Malawi five years ago but got into Tanganyika a bit three years ago.

    This week I sold my last Malawi cichlids and all the fish I have left are Tanganyika.

    I'm not anti-Malawi by any means, it is just that this is where my interest lies at the moment.

    If you are just starting out though, I'd say go with Malawi - usually cheaper and and less strict care needed.

  4. I spent over $400 on a group of juvenile mail-order tropheus in the late spring and was uncertain about feed as I heard they needed "vegetable matter."I also heard they were a sensitive fish and sometimes hard to maintain or even keep alive.

    I had been using NLS for my other cichlids and decided to just do the same with these guys.

    Not one of thiry tropheus got sick or died. In fact they started breeding two months after I got them and they were two inches and under when I got them.

    So for eight months it has been nothing but New Life Spectrum and they go crazy at feeding time. They don't seemed bored with their food.

  5. I had a 180 gallon in my living room of our bungalow for two years. No Problems. It is now in the basement because there is more room down there.

    I have a 90 in the living room now - it has been there 3 years.

    I have a question about the gorilla rack itself. How much tank weight do you think each shelf can support?

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