Blue Ringed Octopus

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All octopus are short lived, they grow breed and die after breeding. usually one year a very few live to be two years. I think there is one from the Arctic ocean that lives a few years but it lives so slow due to cold water that may be the factor. I am familiar with Octopus vulgarious. I catch them quite a bit here on the coast of NC, they can get to be a couple pounds in weight and are very strong animals. they are not very bad about inking and I've caught them on hook and line and they didn't ink. Transferring them to a tank from a bucket was just done by dumping them in the tank as soon as I got home from the ocean. no ink usually but if they did protean and skimmers and activated charcoal removed the ink fairly fast. It' been many years but they were the best wet pets i ever kept, they had big personalities, and did lots of strange and interesting things. But their short lives makes them kinda sad too, like getting a smart dog and then having it die in a few months. I haven't kept them in a long time.
 
True that would be sad but at least you get them for free locally. Whereas for me about the closest I would get to free octopus would be if my gf gave me some of her clamari when we go to a restaurant...lol ...but I wouldn't take it anyway :barf:
 
I have kept 2 blue rings ive caught over the years. They are actually quite boring and just for that reason i wouldnt recommend them. They are 2 shy and stay hidden 90% of the time. I cant say i was worried about being bitten, there is no way they will attack you unless you bumped it or accidently grabbed it. I just made sure i new exactly where it was (only had 1 at a time) before ever sticking my hands in there and kept an eye on it the whole time.
Plus there is the whole if you get bitten your dead thing. That would suck too.
 
Many blue rings that are imported can be imported as fully grown adults. This can lead to them having a life span of literally weeks in some cases! I wouldnt splash out big bucks on something that literally could die any time if i was you!

If your serious about keeping octopi, check out tonmo.com. One thing to think about is possibly small cuttlefish. Cant remember the species name but can be bred in captivity. Depends if your up for a challenge and have the space!
 
Depends if your up for a challenge and have the space!

No I was definetly just thinking about it because of the small space. But now I'm not really thinking about it. Besides it would be quite a few year before I have the space for another tank in my place.
 
wow, i was thinking about an octopus for the wow factor but not at that price. I'll stick to other oddballs that mate like mice or something. Anyone know about saltwater leaf and rock fish compatibilty/lifespan/care level?
 
WHAT THE DEATH

...I wonder if you can keep Irukandji (Cubozoa) spp. jellies with them?
 
What about cuttlefish? How big of a tank do they need? Or what about Nautilus? Totally different and out of the blue but figured those could be cool too. Any knowledge you guys/gals have would be great thanks.
 
smaller cuttles would need like a 30 or so gallon..

never read about nautalusses.. prolly like a 200+
 
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