speaking of grammar, better check yours first "allways" before making
fool of yourself.
everyone on the net is entitled to his/her own opinions, and I never attacked
anyone.
are we talking fishy business here and discussing new ideas and problems,
or are you being racist towards people that to you lack grammatical skills?
"Damaclese" wrote in message ...
geez here we go again t did you know that with water evaporation it can
carrie some but not all impurities away did you know that by properly
setting up and maintaining an aquarium it can actually be verry low maint. i
got a 155 gallon and my water changes are done 6 gallons at a time up 2
flights of stairs .talk about alot of work and every time i do a change i
get mad spawning in my african community tank. yes my fry survival rate is
low but some do make it.
i do a water change once every 5 weeks or so because i can understand
biology and physics and balance my tank and read the fish to see what needs
to be done. lists rules and regulations do not allways a good tank make. Im
just wondering why you continue to attack people with statements or
questions thats pretty much the only reason i responded to this post and
made you waste your time reading it. any way low maint. tanks can work if
you know how to do it. Spelling sucks punctuation and grammar right out the
window i know
-Dama
"T" wrote in message
.net...
"George Zyngulgursh" wrote in message
news
On Thu, 08 Jan 2004 14:22:59 -0800, Chip wrote:
The same fish shop, also carry the biggest non salt water eel I have
ever
seen.
the head size was about .5 inch diameter and was very long. Anyone
knows
about if eels are agressive? I plan to add to my tanganykan cichlid.
Your tank certainly sounds like an interesting one, Chip.
The oldest and best known method of determining the aggressiveness of
freshwater eels is the "dip method". Start by taking a deep breath and
then dip your head into the eel's tank. Try to maintain eye contact with
the eel, otherwise it may think you are lower in the food chain. Then,
while still holding your breath, stick your tongue out at the eel - if
he
bites it, you can safely consider that the eel is aggressive. If not,
just
savour the bouquet of the water and pass that eel by. Works every time.
Cheers!
GZ
I bet you can finding jumping Oscars this way too...
Tim...