"My ]V[ ini ]V[ onster"

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo
blackwolfXKAV;562779; said:
i was under the vague impression that exodons were much larger...details?? it sounds very good now.

BTW: I hate, i mean absolutely HATE, growout tanks. It makes no bloody sense.

I've had mine for over a year and my biggest is 2.5 inches.....I have 12 in a 30 gal................a lot of people say that is the min amount of exo's as they will pick on one another if any less....remember these are schooling fish so gallons neede per fish rule can be bent a little.........:D,

Also.... they are very hardy....I have not ever had one die in the last year.....but you mentioned leaf fish...............boring and all of mine have died in the past.
 
a puufer of some sort???
 
I am keeping a bronze puffer in a 20 long, he is very "monster" for his size( 4.5inches)!!! I like feeding him crabs he just crunches and rips them apart!! He also will jump out or spit at you when you put your fingers near the top of the water, This is a great freshwater MIni-monster that more people with smaller tanks should think about keeping!!
 
bronze puffer sounds like a plan...
you wouldnt happen to have a picture or two of yours? or any other info would be appreciated.
thanks . Wolf.
 
This isn't mine but this what it looks like, I think the scientific name has changed ? last I know it was a.modestus, its all freshwater and stays small like maybe 4-6 inches max, I feed it snails,shrimp,krill and crabs, mine has started to become curious about what my fingers taste like!
 
do an e-cat! they don't look "colorful", but they can be trained to do tricks, and toching one is like touching an electric fence( I love doing that:nilly: )
 
mudskipper;570887; said:
do an e-cat! they don't look "colorful", but they can be trained to do tricks, and toching one is like touching an electric fence( I love doing that:nilly: )

No Dice!


e-cats get 18"+ and the standard 55 is only about 12" wide
 
african butterfly fish. they're like mini arowanas.
 
MonsterFishKeepers.com