Life goes on in Africa…

Loving this water moss in this tank… with nothing on the surface, was starting to get algae on my Anubis this one likes filtered light, and this moss has been the best balance between growth, and maintenance
The blue diamonds ( newest fish ) are doing great, the smaller one growing fastest, and 2 are starting to get filaments on their dorsals no coloration yet but healthy looking, growing fish right now…
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And this is that poorly looking smallest blue diamond today
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A fresh picture of one of the Fantastic’s…
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get your wife to take the pictures and turn the air pump off a few minutes before taking them so there's no bubbles in the way. :)
 
Brichardi's looking rather stately his morning
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Today’s picture of Africa… I think I’m going to move the older peace lily, ( root ball in the upper right corner ), to the other side, so the root ball is in the back ground, rather than the foreground… when viewing from this side ( this tank can be viewed from both sides, but is most viewed from this side )
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I think part of my problem with taking good pictures, is I’m viewing them on my tiny cell phone screen, and by the time I’m looking at them on my computer screen I’ve tried to zoom them too much, so I can see them good on my cell screen, and then they don’t look the best on the computer screen… 2nd picture above I adjusted out a little... too easy to over crop the pictures on the cell phone screen... and I need to do a better job positioning the camera, to make the edges of the tanks, match the edges of the screen, when filling the screen...
 
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A pair of Yellow tails ( Alestopetersius caudalis ),
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that were very actively spawning yesterday… these guys are one of the fish, eating water meal, that I inherited with the watermoss, and ended up taking over the surface, and as a plus,several fish are eating it, and it’s supposed to be a good food source… I think that is “conditioning” them more than the variety of foods they get regularly
 
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Here are some of my wild caught Alestpetersius caudalis. They’re young
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