I’m very excited to see Golf Ball snooting around at feeding time! I never saw them with the lights on before I moved them to the Big Boy Tank, but now they come out regularly to hoover up all the pellets before the cories can get to them!
Unfortunately they can’t fit in their beloved cave anymore, but has found a new home behind some choice driftwood.
I love your fish
I’m just so stupid that I don’t understand singular they right now
I’M A FUCKING SINGULAR THEY please tell golf ball and the cories they are good noots
Gotta love these guys. You can practically hear the little voice going “I’m just a seed pod, I’m just a seed pod!”
Two-rayed Banjo Cat, Amaralia hypsiura
Banjo cats, when not up for sale, should be housed with sand and/or leaf litter that they can burrow into. They’re timid lil guys, and the more places they have to hide, the more you see them. You still won’t see them very often, but it’s great when you do. There are multiple species of banjo catfish available in the hobby, albeit sporadically, and all are great little fish. They’re about the only non-corydoras catfish, aside from honeycomb/oil cats, that can be trusted not to eat your other fish.
This is actually really awesome enrichment for intelligent fish like bettas. Even just putting a novel object outside the tank can give them some entertainment, and when it moves? Get the lil fishy neurons going.
The yellow crested weedfish lives in Australia’s southern
waters. It does its best to look like a piece of kelp – including moving
like one. This individual was drifting back and forth in the surge at
North Bondi, in about 18 m of water.