Tihshho
Established Member
@Gingero let me clarify that this is not an attack on you or your husbandry, more so just saying not everyone learns discipline and correct husbandry over a handful of videos. I'm pro housing pairs/groups together if it's done correctly and safely, but at the end of the day if I were to do it, I would not use information on that to teach a basic audience, unless I had a dedicated greenhouse to the project to throw out how much space is required. Again, I get you can do it with some enclosures, but I'd leave that to those who have years of Cham experience since these creatures can be fragile.
In the case of your husbandry, it shows in your videos how meticulous you are about your chams and how you've actually invested not just money, but the time to study the species you keep.
Edit:
Just wanted to add this in as I figure its worth noting. I've worked on the professional side of the aquarium hobby for years and understand that 90% of fish are much more hardy than chams. That said though, when you see a fish bowl with a goldfish or a turtle in some popular kids movie that came out, every kid in the world wanted just that. I can't tell you how many people I had to explain growth, ammonia cycle, and closed ecosystems for them to understand what they see vs. what they want are two separate things. Sure they could buy a $3 bowl and a $0.25 goldfish and it would live, but doesn't mean it's right. While working in that field for over a decade I had seen some people come from wanting said goldfish to coming in over a 6 years later having a spa reef setup and doing it right. Not everyone is mentally setup to understand that animals have needs outside what most people throw at them (Finding Nemo was the demise of working in the aquarium world) and then there are those in between that realize once they dig into the hobby they get to understand the animals and their requirements. Thankfully I got my degree so I could spend more time with my hobbies in a more positive light.
In the case of your husbandry, it shows in your videos how meticulous you are about your chams and how you've actually invested not just money, but the time to study the species you keep.
Edit:
Just wanted to add this in as I figure its worth noting. I've worked on the professional side of the aquarium hobby for years and understand that 90% of fish are much more hardy than chams. That said though, when you see a fish bowl with a goldfish or a turtle in some popular kids movie that came out, every kid in the world wanted just that. I can't tell you how many people I had to explain growth, ammonia cycle, and closed ecosystems for them to understand what they see vs. what they want are two separate things. Sure they could buy a $3 bowl and a $0.25 goldfish and it would live, but doesn't mean it's right. While working in that field for over a decade I had seen some people come from wanting said goldfish to coming in over a 6 years later having a spa reef setup and doing it right. Not everyone is mentally setup to understand that animals have needs outside what most people throw at them (Finding Nemo was the demise of working in the aquarium world) and then there are those in between that realize once they dig into the hobby they get to understand the animals and their requirements. Thankfully I got my degree so I could spend more time with my hobbies in a more positive light.
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