A rescue? NOOOO........!

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Jeez a 4 ft freeze is crazy. I don’t mind cold but that seems a bit much. Was 4 feet the frost line? How deep would you have had to go for it not to freeze all the way down?

jjohnwm jjohnwm do you reckon when my pond is done I should give one a whirl? They seem kinda cool but I js don’t want it to outgrow my pond.
Four or five feet of ice is just another typical winter for us as well. People drive their trucks out onto the ice...towing house trailers!...for four months each winter. :)

Lol, I'm the last guy to ask about these fish. I'd never even seen one "on the hoof" until these two showed up in the net a couple weeks ago. But if they get even close to their potential size in your pond, it would still eventually be way too small for one, IMHO. Aside from size, the gaudy-looking pattern is ideal for camouflage when viewed from above. You'd rarely even see the thing.

I must admit, though, that seeing a big pointy dorsal fin sticking a foot or so out of the water in a backyard pond would have a certain cool factor...:)
 
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Yeah them getting to big would be my biggest concern. I’ve seen a lot of conflicting info on it tho like some sites say 2 feet full grown while others are closer to 5 I’ve heard. Anybody have any confirmed adult sizes?
 
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I've never worried too much about the "maximum" sizes listed for various fish. Those exceptional specimens are very old; growth slows down to a crawl at a certain point but never really stops completely, so any individual fish that beats the odds and lives to a ripe old age will attain unusually large size. You are very unlikely to ever see or come across a specimen that's near that maximum; it's a bit like making sure all the doors in your home are 8-feet tall to accommodate that tiny fraction of humanity that grows to be 7'6" tall.

But this species doesn't need to be old to be pretty big. There are any number of pictures easily found on the internet of specimens that are far, far larger than merely 2 feet. They aren't exceptional, they're simply the norm.

I've never subscribed to the commonly quoted ideas that a tank or pond needs to be X-times the size of the fish in length and Y-times that size in width. When we get to the point where we start to take measurements to make sure the fish can turn around in its enclosure, where it spends its entire life...well, IMHO, that's not only cruel and improper care, but...what pleasure can there be in seeing something forced to live like that?
 
I have personal experience of raising them from a few inches to 24".

Things to consider are my location and environment.
I'm in Southern California where the climate is very mild. Also, I keep them in outside ponds with lots of algae.

This hobby to me is still relatively young which leaves a lot of opportunity for people to give it a go and show what they can do. If there's a will, there's a way. Make fish keeping great again.
 
Seems like just yesterday that I brought the Hi-Fin home, but it's been over a month. First, the Bad: the fish is just as skittish and nervous as when I first introduced it to the tank. It's in a 120-gallon with only three smaller female Green Swordtails, and of course some snails and shrimp; lots of driftwood, floating plants, leaf litter on the bottom, and now a healthy growth of hair algae as well (which the fish does not eat). Walking across the room in front of the tank still has the fish darting behind the driftwood and sulking for a bit. Nervous fish like this are IMHO always more susceptible to disease; I'd be much happier if the thing started to calm down, perhaps even recognize me as a food source, but no such luck so far.

The Good: the Sucker is looking IMHO better and better as time passes; it may even have grown some tiny amount, judging from the proportionate size of the head and eye compared to the rest of its body. It spends a great deal of time working over the surface of the driftwood, the clay-tile bottom and even the walls of the tank, apparently scarfing up algae and/or biofilm. Better still, the introduction of frozen brine shrimp or bloodworms has it immediately hunting around for the source of the enticing aroma, and when it eventually finds the stuff...which tends to take some time...it now eats quite enthusiastically. Sadly, I need to be overly generous with feeding because the Swordtails need to be satiated to keep them from eating all the food before the Sucker finds it. I also find I have more success with dropping in a frozen chunk and letting the juice carry the scent everywhere; normally I thaw frozen foods in a glass and then decant 95% of the water to get rid of that source of waste, but doing that makes him even slower to locate the food. I'm doing two water changes weekly, each about 75-80%; I normally do more per change, but the fish is already nervous enough without adding to his fear by dropping the water level down too low.

The fish is obviously not blind; it reacts immediately to even relatively small motions on my part by running and hiding. But when it's searching for food it seems to go entirely by scent, never locating and approaching food items by sight.

So...I'm still not comfortable with his progress, but it is trending in a positive direction. I'm seeing the first batch of tiny shrimplets appearing all over the tank, and I'm curious if he's eating any. I also try some Northfin Bug Pro sinking pellets occasionally, but can't guarantee he's actually accepted that yet.

Lousy pic:
PXL_20250715_160040037.jpg
 
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