For pickup in NH. I know it's a long shot, but I thought I'd go ahead and post on the off chance that somebody wants these guys. (My LFS leaves much to be desired, so I'd rather not take them back there.)
These are wild-type ("feeder") guppies, not fancies, but they are really quite pretty. Unique patterns of black, red, green, and silver. I can post pics tomorrow if folks are interested. Probably 4-6 months old. Very active and fun to watch. They chase each other around, but there doesn't seem to be any serious aggression. All healthy and no other fish in the tank, so you can be fairly certain they're disease-free.
One of them has a lump in his tail that it has had since I bought them. It hasn't changed at all and doesn't seem to slow him down any. I'd say keep him away from the females in case it's genetic, but he's also the prettiest of the bunch. If somebody just wants the other three, that's fine. I can find a little tank to let the lumpy one live out his fishy life if need be.
I'll be sad to see them go, to tell the truth, but I want to get Endlers so I can't have common guppies hanging around polluting the Endler genes.
These are wild-type ("feeder") guppies, not fancies, but they are really quite pretty. Unique patterns of black, red, green, and silver. I can post pics tomorrow if folks are interested. Probably 4-6 months old. Very active and fun to watch. They chase each other around, but there doesn't seem to be any serious aggression. All healthy and no other fish in the tank, so you can be fairly certain they're disease-free.
One of them has a lump in his tail that it has had since I bought them. It hasn't changed at all and doesn't seem to slow him down any. I'd say keep him away from the females in case it's genetic, but he's also the prettiest of the bunch. If somebody just wants the other three, that's fine. I can find a little tank to let the lumpy one live out his fishy life if need be.
I'll be sad to see them go, to tell the truth, but I want to get Endlers so I can't have common guppies hanging around polluting the Endler genes.
