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Any good book recommendations for Apistogramma?
Does volume 1 cover much in apisto and other dwarf cicihld ? The reason i ask is volume 2 is readily available but not volume 1.For the most part they discuss different species, plus more recent information in CA2. There is no CA3, at least yet.
Pity he doesn't reprint it - or update it and reprint it. If printing isn't feasible he could maybe sell a pdf (of course some would copy it but ....)CA1 covers almost every dwarf cichlid species known before 2000. CA2 covers updates and new forms since then. CA1 is nearly impossible to find anymore. Those who have it keep it. Sadly Uwe told me years ago that the last 1500 copies in English were destroyed in a warehouse fire, so they're rare. If you're bilingual there are German and French versions out there.
Some years ago Uwe said that he plans to publish a revised edition of CA1, so maybe one day in the future...Pity he doesn't reprint it - or update it and reprint it. If printing isn't feasible he could maybe sell a pdf (of course some would copy it but ....)
Where can vol 1 be purchased reasonably. eIn English, Cichlid atlas 1, and CA 2 by Romer are probably as good as it gets. If you’re willing to translate, Apistogramma and friends (?) by Koslowski is purported to be the superior book.
Sadly, it cannot be found at a reasonable price anymore. Maybe, if you are lucky, you might find it at a secondhand/charity store, but rather unlikely. I have 2, 1 in English and 1 in German - and you will not get either until you pull them from my cold, dead hands.Where can vol 1 be purchased reasonably. e
You just have to be diligent watching Amazon and eBay. I scooped my vol 1 for $80 on eBay after a few years of watchingWhere can vol 1 be purchased reasonably. e
Amazon is asking a lot of money like $148.00 or something. Crazy prices for an older bookYou just have to be diligent watching Amazon and eBay. I scooped my vol 1 for $80 on eBay after a few years of watching
Amazon is asking a lot of money like $148.00 or something. Crazy prices for an older book
It is a shame.When I was hunting my copy, typical Amazon/eBay pricing was in the 4-800 range
$400 - too rich for meHi all,
It is a shame.
I'd like to recommend Mike Hellweg's book on live food to people, but it now sells for silly money, and I'm guessing very few of the purchasers are purchasing it because of its content.
<"https://www.amazon.co.uk/Culturing-Live-Foods-Michael-Hellweg/dp/0793806550">
cheers Darrel
I've got both of those.Am I horribly out of date with my old 1990s book "Dwarf Cichlids: American Cichlids I" by Linke & Staeck from Tetra Publishing? That's what I have on my shelf, along with "The Cichlid Aquarium" by Paul Loiselle.
I have hard tap water as well, and am a rainwater user, but I'm going to guess (all right I know) that it rains a lot more in SW England than it does in the SW USA.mostly because our water is naturally very hard and a bit alkaline here in the foothills of Los Angeles, and it was just that much easier. Stupidly, we had record amounts of rain this spring.... I should have been saving that!!
I don't have a copy, but you can expect the taxonomy to have changed somewhat since.Am I horribly out of date with my old 1990s book "Dwarf Cichlids: American Cichlids I" by Linke & Staeck from Tetra Publishing?
Saving... well, not enough, because using soft water like rain or RO has to come from a steady source and your region is mostly semi-arid to full-on desert. You can scratch breeding and maybe should consider only a handful of species known to be tolerant of harder water. Personally I'd probably scratch south america as a whole and do a shelldweller tank.mostly because our water is naturally very hard and a bit alkaline here in the foothills of Los Angeles, and it was just that much easier. Stupidly, we had record amounts of rain this spring.... I should have been saving that!!