4 year old Blackbelt Cichlid Pics

Bmeasure

Humble disciple of Jesus Christ
Aug 6, 2004
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Here are a couple of updated pics of my Veija maculicauda. It's been a year since the last pics, so I'll try to add one from last year to show you the difference. He's roughly 4 years old now. When I got him he was just under 1" and was a bland grey color. People always walked right past him in the LFS before I bought him. Good thing for me! The tank is a custom (built by me) 150 gallon with a 25 gallon sump. It's just him and 1 medium pleco in the tank.

Here's some new ones, sorry they are small, but the others are too large of files.

2006 Bruce 1- 64.2KB.JPG 2006 Bruce 2 - 103KB.JPG 2006 Bruce 3 - 103KB.JPG 2006 Bruce 4 - 64.2KB.JPG 2006 Bruce 5 - 64.2KB.JPG
 
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Here's a couple of the ones from last year. Look at how much more mature he looks compared to these older ones. He's also now starting to get a bit of a nuchal hump. I can't say he's any more than 1 foot long, but he's grown taller and thicker over the last year. He's nearly 2" thick and my guess is at least 7" tall without fins.

From about 1 year ago:
http://www.aquariacentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=56836
 
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To be honest, it's only worth building your own tank if you love working with wood or want to build a very simple, functional tank. To build a showpiece takes a lot of time and yes, quite a bit of money. The tank in the pics is 150 gallons, 5'x 22", and I built the tank (only one piece of glass) out of plywood and coated it with epoxy (two-part, potable water safe), the canopy, the stand, the wet/dry filter, and the artificial rock background. I enjoy creating things, and I have worked with wood for years, so I enjoyed the process, but as far as being worth it money-wise.....it's questionable. What would you pay yourself for a full months worth of intensive, labor, including designing, building and painting/staining/epoxying?

By the way, it's a real pain working with epoxy without a powerful resperator (it will give you a massive headache for a day or more with just minor inhalation). I was outside in fresh air when I opened the epoxy, and wasn't wearing a resperator. The first breath I took after opening the container almost caused me to puke instantly. This nausea continued for about 1/2 hour, and I had a headache well into the next day! It's seriously nothing to take lightly. Also, get fresh resperator inserts for each new project you do. When they start to wear out, you may not smell more than a very minor scent, but after an hour of being in it, it can really add up in pain later. You generally don't feel the pain for an hour or two, but when you do, it lasts hours.

The upside to building your own tank is being able to customise it to your (and your fish's) needs. My fish really started acting in a more natural way when I gave him the room to spread his fins a bit. It did not, although, help him in accepting other tankmates. My experience with Blackbelts is that they are hardy and can put up with quite a lot when they are the underdogs, but before they become the largest fish, they become dominant and are relentless in ruling their territory and driving others away. Only the armor on the Pleco, and the hiding spots he has has kept him alive in this tank. Even a Jack Depsey (very territorial) that was 1.5x his size was no match for him when he was just a juvenile. I wish I could upload some videos of him when the lights in the room are out and he can see his reflection in the glass! WOW!
 
very cool! I am in the construction business and I like building stuff so that is not a problem. I have just concidered building one for an in the wall display tank, and thought that I would be better off doing it myself, to get what i want. Thanks for the tip on the epoxy. One last question, did you use a piece of glass or plexiglass? thanks.
 
I used 1/2" glass. I wanted scratch resistance (especially with sand, as you can see), and I wanted a silicone seal that actually held itself tight. I'm not sure if you are aware, but Acrylic doesn't bond with silicone, it will probably stay in place with all the force of the water against it, but it won't hold tight on it's own. I didn't want the hassle of it losing it's seal while doing large water changes (since the water would be at half the glass and have no pressure against the top). I didn't want to accidentally kick it in while leaning over it vacuuming the bottom :rant2:

Oh, another plus.....the plywood tank is MUCH MUCH lighter than an equivalent gallon all glass tank. It took 4 of us to place my clients tank on the stand (her's is 150 also, but a 7' long version). My brother and I easily placed my ply tank on it's stand by ourselves!
 
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