Sure, would be glad to bring you the fish at the picnic. Not sure why they suggested rasboras for you tank. I wouldn't think they would do good in the hard water, high pH conditions. I wouldn't think you would need to seperate them at all. If the labs eat them, I suppose I could give you more. They are over an inch. Susan ----- Original Message ----- From: AuntieFran@comcast.net To: gsas-member@thekrib.com Sent: Sunday, July 18, 2004 1:06 PM Subject: Yellow Labs and Blue Daffordils - Susan Susan, hubby would like to have four or five of your Blue Daffodils. Suppose we could get them at the picnic? Another thing: We're assuming that your Blue Daffodils are young, i.e., small; and, since we had a bad experience trying to introduce five tiny harlequin rasboras as dither fish (there were only three the next morning) at the recommendation of the LFS, we'd like to know if the Blue Daffodils need a grow-out tank before they're introduced to the Yellow Labs. By the way, when the five - excuse me, three - harlequins were removed, we tried with my school of five full-grown scissortail rasboras; the following morning, there were only four. Who says Yellow Labs aren't aggressive?! LOL -- Growing old is inevitable; growing up is optional. --- StripMime Report -- processed MIME parts --- multipart/alternative text/plain (text body -- kept) text/html --- ------------------ To unsubscribe from this list, please send mail to majordomo@thekrib.com with "Unsubscribe gsas-member" in the body of the message. Archives of this list can be found at http://lists.thekrib.com/gsas-member/ --- StripMime Report -- processed MIME parts --- multipart/alternative text/plain (text body -- kept) text/html --- ------------------ To unsubscribe from this list, please send mail to majordomo@thekrib.com with "Unsubscribe gsas-member" in the body of the message. Archives of this list can be found at http://lists.thekrib.com/gsas-member/