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There's the Chinese Ranchu and then there's the Japanese Ranchu.
There's the mass production Ranchu and there's the pedigree one. There's the cheap one and there's the high priced one. But there's no in-between. A pedigree outside of Japan that is affordable to many. I think that summarises the plight of many would be Ranchu lovers in the Asia Pac region, or maybe worldwide. Honestly, price is a barrier, and Ranchus are not easy pets, provided that there's lots of education material and information available (look at how Koi is marketed). I think forming a SIG (Special Interest Group) is a great idea. Kudos! These are beautiful fishes, and it would be great if we can produce pedigree Ranchu here in Malaysia, to promote the hobby. cheers. |
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It would be great if you can introudce me to them |
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The minimum space required is 1 meter square (around 3 feet x 3 feet) of tub will do. BUT when the fish grows bigger, they need more space. I have a link here and you can take it as your reference. You'll need an online translation page to translate the Japanese. (being it's google, alta vista, wordlingo, etc.) ランチュウ 飼育密度 Since our technique does not use filter at all and does 100% water change. When fish density is high, means water quality is more difficult to control thus illness. Therefore, you need to plan based on adult fish when you get juvenile fish. Or else, you'll end up keep adding tub and never seems enough of space. As normally, Japanese will recommend you to use 2 meter square tubs. Max water depth is around 15-18cm. So, you don't need something deep and expensive. Also, you need not to fix and get a tub specialized for goldfish/any fish....... CR is using plastic drawers that he got from IKEA. Some Japanese uses Tub for concrete mixing use. So, it is not necessary to get from fish shop, it is available all around you and as long as it has no sharp edges inside and easy to handle and clean. Of cos, it need to be in some logical shape too (not star shape pls) So, Ranchu keeping is some very flexible and economical hobby and not like what've been branded expensive hobby by fish shops. Enjoy! BTW, Hi, small ranchu, I heard there's a company "Neo-Ranchu" in America specialized in importing Japanese Ranchu. Do you know if they are still around? Cheers.
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Japanese Ranchu is another ball game |
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Hi everyone
I stumbled upon this forum recently and I was extremely excited to know that there are people around KL/PJ area keeping Japanese Ranchu. I am a big fan of this and I have a concrete pond with about 12'(L)x3'(W)x2'(D). I am interested in raising them from juvenile. Can anyone point me to the right source? Thanks P.S. Been keeping some TVR's for about 2 months now. Enjoyed that as well but my ultimate aim is still Japanese Ranchu. |
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Hope can meet u in TT section /gathering in PJ.There is a weekly friday night ranchu Gathering section in PJ old town.Do send me pm if u intrested.Cheers.
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We Keep CICHLIDS , We Don't Behave Like CICHLIDS ! |
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Been a long time since I post here. Here goes:
This is a Kashino from my very first batch of BBRs in early 2007. Now only left this fella. Pity it had a long spell of gill flukes and had to treat for very long. Afraid it is a little stunt, very small for its age. Before in mid 2007: ![]() On 19 Jan 2008: ![]() ![]() |
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