Come on back to the fold!
Merritt Adkins and the Crew 2/4/08 My
Bio Dear Bob, Michael said you didn't mind me volunteering on
WWM and that you needed a bio and a picture. Merritt Adkins
Hello! I am a senior at Texas A&M University at Galveston
getting a B.S in Marine Biology. I received my first freshwater
aquarium at age 12. It was a simple setup including the blue
gravel, plastic plants and a penguin bio-wheel filter. Now, eight
years later I have become an avid aquarist with my planted
freshwater tanks specializing in small (10 gallons or less)
planted tanks. Some of my personal favorite fish are Bettas,
Corys, glass catfish, kuhli loaches, and freshwater/brackish
puffers. These are just my favorites but I have kept many other
species of freshwater fish through the years. Right now I have
two 15 gallon community tanks, three Betta tanks (two are 1
gallon and a 2.5 gallon), a dwarf puffer 5 gallon tank, and a 6
gallon brackish water tank for my baby figure 8 puffer. (He is
less than an inch long!!) I have been slowly getting into the
marine aquarium hobby, but I still consider my freshwater tanks
to be my favorite types of tanks. I am currently breeding Bettas
and I eventually want to breed my dwarf puffers. My future goals
are being able to keep some larger fish like Tiger Oscars and
Spotted Gar. I will eventually send a better picture. I hope this
helps! Thanks!! Merritt A. <Indeed, I/we thank you for coming
forward, sharing. I take it Michael will show you how to log
in... Please take a read here re some conventions we use in
responding.
http://wetwebmedia.com/WWMAdminSubWebIndex/crewsupwebmail.htm Bob
Fenner>
MerrittA returns - 03/06/09 Hello Mr. Fenner,
<Merritt! Geez, just Bob will ya?> I wanted to let you know
that I can start answering questions again cause I got my degree,
a Bachelor of Science in Marine Biology <Ahh, congratulations
on your matriculation> and have ample amounts of free time to
help with the queries. I am very proud of it and now I am
starting the long road to graduate school. I missed answering
questions when I was in school. If you don't mind, I made a
folder for myself. I have below and updated bio for the crew
member page. If you don't need my help that's fine, just
email me if you guys are overloaded with questions and I will try
to make a dent. Thanks for having such a great site, I remember
using this when I was younger! :-) <Dang!> Merritt Adkins
Hello! I am 22 years old and a graduate of Texas A&M
University at Galveston with a B.S in Marine Biology. I am now
currently pursuing graduate school regarding coral reef
conservation and marine invertebrate research with emphasis on
cephalopods. I hope to eventually acquire my doctorate and
conduct my own research. Soon I will be published in a scientific
journal regarding my research with Capitella sp. (Polychaete) and
it's larval stages. Hopefully this will help me with graduate
school acceptance! I started in the hobby with freshwater tanks
and due to the help of my boyfriend, eventually got into
saltwater tanks. I currently have a 6 gallon Nano Reef that has a
maroon clown fish with a pink bubble anemone and lots of corals.
(It looks like a miniature reef!) But, I don't consider
myself to be very educated regarding saltwater tanks, I am still
learning. I am better with freshwater tanks and have had them
throughout my life. I have had tons of different freshwater fish
ranging from guppies to a Mbu puffer. I still greatly enjoy
freshwater tanks and will eventually setup a nice ten gallon
planted tank, but haven't got the time. I have had planted
tanks since I was 12 and have never looked at plastic plants
again. I have had in my planted tanks Madagascar lace, Anubias,
Java Fern, Anacharis and Cryptocoryne just to name a few. Before
I did the leap to saltwater tanks, I had a brackish water tank
with my figure 8 puffer with many brackish water plants.
Hopefully, once life isn't so hectic, I can have more than
one tank! I also have five Bettas which I have been trying to
breed for so long, and I still haven't succeed. (Only the
Polychaetes will breed for me!) Once I am done with school and
settled down, I would LOVE to setup a Sepia bandensis (dwarf
cuttlefish) tank and breed them. I have experience with all
different species of cephalopods and would greatly enjoy having
some in my home. Thanks very much! :-)
<Welcome back. BobF>
|
Nice! |
Steve Allen Bob:
<Steve> It was great to finally meet you in Pleasanton &
Milpitas. I am glad that my medical seminar trip to SF coincided
with your visit. My brothers enjoyed meeting you as well. Perhaps
Jeff will be your neighbor someday. He is going to begin
preliminary scouting for a place on the Kona coast in a few months.
<Greatly enjoyed meeting you> Sorry to take so long to get
back to you about WWM. It's been hectic. I wonder sometimes why
I every take time off. It's such a chore getting ready and then
catching up afterward, that it hardly seems worth it. <Start
coming on dive/adventure trips with us instead... you will do a 180
on your subjective evaluations of whether such always are
"worth it"!> I am honored that Ananda suggests I be
considered to answer questions. <I am making the same
request> There are two issues for me to consider here. The first
is, of course, time. In addition to being a pediatrician, I also
have 4 children ranging from 7-15 years old. <Yikes... when do
you sleep?> My offer to proofread stands, as this is something
that I can find the time to do. I will also very much enjoy reading
& learning in advance of the general public. However, a daily
schedule of answering inquiries is a bit more challenging.
<Yes> Issue number two is my relative lack of experience. I
have only been at this SW hobby for a year now. I have to admit
that I pretty much sleepwalked through FW for 30 years before that.
On the other hand, I am an eager learner. I have acquired numerous
books, including yours, Anthony's, Eric Borneman's, Fossa
and Nielsen's, Julian Sprung's, Scott Michael's &
Nick Daikin's. (It's genetic, my mother was a librarian and
is still a voracious reader.) I subscribe to FAMA, TFH and Aquarium
Fish. I read the FAQs daily. <Oh my... a strong case for having
folks read, read in front of and to their children if ever there
was> We doctors usually have a knack for lifelong learning and
finding the info we need. I have learned over the years that
incorrect memory is a major source of medical error (along with bad
handwriting). I tell residents I am teaching that after they pass
their boards, they should never memorize "facts" that
they can look up in a more current book or journal. The point is, I
have readily available the tools I need to find info to help
people. <Yes> Of course, I also agree with Anthony that one
should avoid spoon-feeding people. ("Give a man a fish &
you feed him for a day; teach him to fish and you feed him fore a
lifetime." That is until the oceans are emptied by
over-fishing.) If the answer is readily available on WWM, then I
would refer the questioner to the location to read personally.
<Agreed> My biggest concern here is that I lack the
credibility that the long-time aquarists of the crew have. <Mmm,
having met and spoken with you for several minutes I don't have
this concern. Sir, there is a requisite "attitude" toward
what we do as WWM Crew beyond knowledge of the subjects, capacity
for relating pertinent facts/experiences/guesses... that is
"approach"... in an "equals" aspect, relating
what we know as such... not ever expressing speculation as wisdom
or anything other than "what we would/might do" in
similar circumstances. It is my opinion you possess (or at least
appear to express) this quality. 'Sides, we have a
"stop-gap" measure or two re unfamiliar queries. We (the
WWM Crew), "move" them into each others
"in-boxes" or back to the general in-box if we feel
someone else might be better-suited to respond> There are areas
that I would be weak on, such as fluid dynamics and plumbing (as
demonstrated by a panicked call from my wife brining the kids and I
rushing home from Chili's to find 20 gallons of water on the
floor of my basement the other night). Other areas I might have
some trouble are lighting, complicated chemistry, advanced coral
care, and unusual inverts. I am learning as fast as I can though. I
am aware that much in the aquarium hobby is opinion as it is in
medicine and I have learned to accept such ambiguities long ago.
Otherwise, I would not be able to survive in pediatrics. I am
willing to present more than one view for the inquirer to consider
if there is not compelling evidence that one particular way of
doing things is best. <I understand and expect that all of us
(myself of course included) are not comfortable, competent or
well-versed on many subject areas of ornamental aquatics. Indeed,
such breadth and depth is not a human capability IMO... there is
simply too much engineering, math, biology, organismal coverage...
to be embodied in single individuals... What we do is "divide
and offer" where we can, refer or "throw up our
hands" where we can't> If you feel that I would be a
good addition to the crew, I could take some questions. If you
would like to cc some to me and have me answer them and send them
back so you can see what you think of my answers (sort of a skill
test), I would be happy to do this. Someone else ought to provide
the actual answer while you decide if my answers are the sort of
thing you need. <Ahh!> What is the daily traffic? Weekdays
are a problem because I work 10+ hours per day. How about if I
answered SW questions on weekends? Sundays are particularly good
because I have a few hours to myself. <Let us try by adding you
to our Crew, I am making a "Folder" for you... you are:
Steve We have a few conventions re responding, mainly in
formatting. Am sure Anthony will chime in here with a link to
previous statements recorded re.> Sorry to be so long-winded,
but I want you to understand where I'm coming form on this.
Steve Allen <I do... and appreciate your offer of proof-reading,
responding. In particular I welcome your help on the few
"medical", "scientific" queries we receive...
and will likely see more of with the growing awareness of your help
on WWM. Please do log-in when you have time (on the weekends), and
make it known if I can be of assistance. Bob Fenner> |
|
Yet another Crew Member.
Sugam Bhasin 10/10/11
Hi Bob,
Thanks as always for you advise. Reference helping out with WWM,
I can indeed dedicate some time everyday as needed. While I am
not currently on the forum (not accessible from work whereas
email is), I am happy to assist in any way I can. Whether it is
proofing and rewording or something else.
As for a short profile, please find below. Picked it from a
preexisting profile. Please let me know if you need more
information
As a communications professional, Sugam has over 15 years of
experience in the fields of public relations, marketing and
corporate communications. Having worked in North America, India
and the Middle East, he has developed a strong sense for global
communications. Sugam began his career at Ogilvy & Mather,
one of the leading global brand communications agencies and has
since worked with a number of organizations in various
industries. During his time as a communicator, Sugam has built a
reputation for his ability to effectively and effortlessly craft
and convey messages through his vivid writing skills as well as
his research capabilities.
As regards my experience in the hobby, I started out with
freshwater species over four years ago and have killed more fish
than I have kept alive. I made the move to marine two years ago
and again have made almost every mistake a beginner can make. I
have a stronger understanding of freshwater and am finding my
feet in the marine space.
To be fair, I would not consider myself a reliable single
resource for advise <advice> on the hobby even though I do
have knowledge of the basics.
I would perhaps be more effective in drafting, proofing and
editing original works for the site if that is indeed a
requirement.
Regards,
SB
Ahh! Thank you Sugam. Am soliciting your email about w/ the
current WWM
Crew, editing of CA? Do please stay tuned. BobF
Ahh! Thank you Sugam. Am soliciting your email about w/ the
current WWM Crew, editing of CA? Do please stay tuned.
BobF
Re: Yet another Crew Member 10/10/11
Thank you for the consideration. I am happy to provide writing
samples should you need those and despite the evidence to the
contrary, I actually am on target with grammar (cannot believe
the typos!)
Sugam
<Heeee! Happens to me... most days! BobF>
Hello Sugam,
Welcome aboard!
Cheers, Neale
Sugam, thank you for coming forward. Welcome to the WWM Crew!
Our webmail log-in is: >>>>
Your email folder: Sugam!
Some input re conventions we've found useful in responding
can be found
here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/WWMAdminSubWebIndex/crewsupwebmail.htm
Don't feel pressured... but only comfortable, responding to
what you find of interest.
Cheers, Bob Fenner
Re: Yet another question -
Thanks Bob. Really excited and hope to contribute. I will review
the links this evening and dive in. When do I get my sheriff
badge (kidding!)? Could I possibly request that all further
correspondence be directed to sugam.XXXX.com ?
<Certainly>
Would rather have my personal email ID in play here for obvious
reasons.
Cheers,
Sugam
<And you, BobF>
|
|
Ian Behnk Makes Contact
10/18/05 Robert <Ian!> I haven't spoken with any of
you guys in a while so I am trying to email everyone to catch up on
things. The last six months- a year I have been foolish...trying so
hardly to do things that others have wanted me to. <Mmm, as long
as you're trying to do the things you want to do...> I have
been busy with school, work, etc. But I like helping other fellow
aquarists out with the problems that I have had and others that I
can help them solve with the knowledge I have acquired over the
years. If you could please add me back on the WWM website so I can
start helping ASAP it would be greatly appreciated. <Please add
yourself... make an infolder... you have the site, contact info?
Will add your name on the active list on WWM's dailies when you
are responding> I finally realized that this is what I enjoy
doing in life and it is what I will continue to do. My major is an
MBA masters in business administration but marine science is my one
true love. I thank you for everything and If I can be of any help,
anytime just let me know. Thanks again for everything. Ian Behnk
<Thank you. BobF> I was wondering when everyone is getting
together? Do you guys have any plans, etc. Let me know and I will
most likely be able to go. <Mmm, a few things coming up... the
May 06 Interzoo and Red Sea trip/s (Germany, Egypt), and the next
Western Marine Conference (in Sacramento)... and there's always
the possibility of coming out to HI (Sabrina and I are there now,
with EricR on the way)... or....? B> Dear Wet Web Media crew,
<Ian> Hello my name is Ian Behnk, I am 16 years old and I
live in Altamonte Springs, FL. I plan on going to Eckerd College in
St. Petersburg/Tampa and becoming an ichthyologist. This has been a
dream/goal of mine for sometime now and is slowly becoming reality,
since I will be a senior in high school next year and applying for
college. I have been keeping marine/freshwater fish for about 5
years now and am very hungry for knowledge. I was wondering if I
could join your team of very knowledgeable people. I have been
wanting to do so ever since I saw this magnificent site. I want to
be able to help fellow hobbyists and learn at the same time. Your
response will be greatly appreciated. Thank you all. Sincerely, Ian
Behnk <Thank you for your offer of help. Would you please tell
us a bit about your background in the field, capacity for
responding to queries. Do you have the time (likely an hour or so a
day) to commit to this work? Please do check with your
parents/guardian re this... we do not want to cut into other time
(school, vocation, other avocations) you have, might develop. Be
chatting, Bob Fenner> Crew Help Mr. Fenner My questions
that I feel more comfortable answering are more like compatibility
issues with fish-marine and fresh-had freshwater fish long before I
even thought about salt. Marine Angelfish and Tangs I have been
studying Genus, Species behavior etc. Fish wise I should be ok.
Corals on the other hand I have to read more about at
WetWebMedia.com. Crustaceans-have read all the pages pertaining to
them and all the FAQs. Water quality issues I should be ok with-
had to deal with a lot of that while working at the
LFS-compatibility issues also. Marine fish diseases-know how to
treat many of them, signs etc. If you think of any other questions
just email me back. thanks, Ian <Jason, please indoctrinate Ian
as to WWM responding. Welcome my friend. Bob Fenner> |
Return of a
prodigal son 07/16/08 Hey Since I am finishing up with
school full time I was wondering If I could come back and help you
guys on wetwebmedia.com. Please let me know Ian Behnk PS this is my
new email addy <Ahh, welcome back Ian... I hope/trust the
intervening years have seen you happy, healthy, progressing. The
new log-in for WWM is: BobF> |
Emerson Blewett and WWM
9/29/06 It would be an honor and a privilege to help others
the way the WWM crew has helped me in the past. I can contribute at
least a few hours a week to spreading the good word of quarantine,
proper livestock selection and water quality. <Ahhh... welcome
to our association> |
|
Ryan Bowen Hey guys! I have 1
hour per day in which I will respond to queries. General, basic
questions about freshwater, brackish and marine are all within my
realm. I really enjoy helping novice aquarists. It was the great
advice I acquired in my first few years that has kept me in the
hobby. My personal history with aquaria, as many, started with
fishing, and bringing home fish native to California. I've kept
many freshwater Basses, trout, cichlids, native eels-even a
freshwater Striped Bass from Lake Mendocino. Now, I have a few
tanks, and a reef. I enjoy biotopic set-ups the most. I have a good
working knowledge of reefs, FOWLR, and FO saltwater. I've kept
a large amount of Africans Cichlids, predominantly from Lake
Malawi. I've recently been shopping for my newest 75 gal reef,
so I am up to date on equipment. I also maintain a Nano-reef at
work. You could say I'm addicted! My personal goal in this
hobby is to educate others about the joys of aquaria. If
fishkeeping has taught me anything, it's that everything is
inter-dependant. For every action, there is a reaction. We, as
aquarists, have an awesome responsibility towards the biotopes we
recreate. Bottom line, I'd love to help. In this forum, I truly
feel that there is "a shared admiration of the sea."
Regards- Ryan Bowen |
We still have no
idea
what Ryan looks like. |
Lisa Brown - 01/12/2006 Hello
Mr. Fenner! I believe Justin (Jager) was in contact with you about
my desire to join the WWM Crew. I've always admired what you
have going on here, and would love to help. My primary love
concerning aquaria is puffers. I am comfortable in answering
questions about fresh, brackish or marine puffers, their systems
and maladies, and posses the knowledge to do so accurately. I also
personally maintain a saltwater reef tank, and I am quite familiar
with SW systems, livestock compatibility and disease treatment.
Like many, my first aquarium was a freshwater community, so if need
be, I am comfortable fielding questions in that area as well. I am
currently a moderator on the puffer forum. I read the daily
FAQ's on WWM nearly everyday, and love learning new things, as
I feel it's impossible to ever know everything in this great
hobby of ours Just so you know me a bit better, I'm a 23 year
old student, studying architecture. I also work full-time at an
insurance brokerage in Toronto. I travel as often as I can to dive
as much as possible. Well, I digress! Thank you for considering me
for the crew, hope to hear from you soon. Lisa. |
|
Mike Bryant and WWM Crew, Fritz
job/s Mr. Fenner, Hello, my name is Mike Bryant and I am a
friend of Jeni Tyrell. I was an employee at a local fish store that
she used to frequent (currently employed by FEMA). She has told me
about the wetwebmedia site and I have found it very interesting.
She has suggested that I email you in regards to volunteering my
services as a point of contact for various aquatic questions. I
have been working in the pet industry for 4 years and have a B.S.
in Earth Science. I have bred everything from discus, angelfish and
various African cichlids. My main focus and love being with
saltwater fish, corals (propagation) and aquatic chemistry. I could
continue on about what I have done but I think the list would be
too long. If you would like I could draft a list of my experiences
but I would like to defer at this time. Also, I saw your post about
Fritz looking for sales representatives for their business. I tried
to look on their site but could not find any additional
information. Any additional information would be appreciated.
Please find the attached resume for your review and consideration.
Thank you, Mike Bryant <The Fritz (Pets, Industries) post is
quite old (a few years) buy you might contact them just the same:
http://www.fritzpet.com/index.html
re your interest in employment. By your description of experience,
relation to Jeni you are welcome to join our crew in responding to
queries. |
|
Andy Bulgin
Crew Question...? -4/6/10
Hey y'all! When did Melissa M. join the Crew? :D.
<She did not. Just a profile pic of mine with a fine friend.
Keep pushing it she may join up though.>
Aren't you supposed to quarantine new purchases for at least
6 weeks??
<She is a sensitive species. Quarantine does more harm than
good here.>
Andy B.
<Stick to what you know. Tag good people in horrible FaceBook
pics.
Melisa Mitchell.>
Andy Bulgin
Re: Crew Question
Phew! I was worried. Would you recommend a formalin dip for her?
She looks a little pale. Will she be alright under my lighting? I
have a 300g with 2 65W actinic power compacts.
<Just make sure there is good protein skimming. And get some
sun yourself.
Scott V.>
|
|
Richard Bullard's Bio
Thank you so much for this wonderful opportunity! I only hope I can
live up to expectations! I was born at Tripler Army hospital on
Oahu, December 25th, 1970. After four years, the family moved to
Columbia, SC. Due to unexplained circumstances, my parents divorced
when I was six. Mom moved to Lakeland, FL, while dad stayed in SC.
I pretty much played ping pong between them for most of my
schooling. This gave me a wide exposure to different monetary and
ethical views. I do not have any hard feelings for their break-up.
It has definitely made them happier. I first started keeping fish
in 1989. A friend sold me a 29 gallon with equipment and fish,
without giving me any real instructions. After wiping those fish
out, I began to shop the local stores in Columbia. It was the same
everywhere I went, they would all gladly take my money, without
regard to the fishes needs or my abilities. Needless to say I was
on a three month tear, nuking everything I touched. Eventually,
this was too much to bear, so I decided to do something about
it...I took a job at a fish only store called Blue Lagoon. There I
was introduced to the proper methods of selecting and caring for
fish. My mortalities decreased. Now this was becoming fun, the way
a hobby should be. As I was there, I realized my true gift was
communication. Not only did I have, (and still do!) passion for the
hobby, I could easily break "complex" ideas down into
something more digestible to the layman. I truly believe my diverse
background helped here. I was comfortable with the upper echelon as
well as the lowly street thug, and even more importantly, I could
make them feel better about what they were doing. As the days
progressed, I found myself working in various fish stores, all with
similar results. I was building a following. Friends would tell
each other about this guy who would tell the truth. It may have,
(and still does!) cost me some initial sales, but the loyalty it
built was/is priceless. Seventeen years had passed. Today, I am
co-owner of a fish only store in Sumter, SC. My partner Chevis and
I strive to offer customer service and satisfaction implicitly. We
would rather lose a sale than lose trust. If a fish/coral is not
healthy, we will not sell it. If a piece of equipment is not
necessary, we will attempt to talk the customer out of it. By
taking the time to explain fully the reasoning and function behind
the product, not only do we gain and keep the trust, we also
further the hobby. By educating them as much as we can, we send
them out into the world, armed with understanding, to be able to
help themselves and others. It is this mentality that has people
driving from over 100 miles just to see us and the store. On July
15th, I am to be wed. My bride to be, Alicia, has renewed my
passion or the hobby even more. She actually raised wolf eels! Her
first saltwater fish. Watching her pleasure and excitement only
furthers mine! I do not consider myself to be an expert. I learn
more everyday. That is what makes me dangerous! Richard
Bullard |
|
Anthony Rosario Calfo was born in Hawaii and lives
in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He is a lifelong aquarist and an
aquarium industry professional that has worked the better part of
the last decade as a commercial coral farmer and wholesaler,
producing cultured reef invertebrates for the ornamental and
zoological trade. In a greenhouse environment, he has witnessed
such blessed wonders as spawning Tridacnid clams and
Cassiopeia jellyfish growing from medusae to adulthood.
After selling his mariculture facilities, he has worked as a
writer publishing fiction and non-fiction material. He has
authored the reef aquariology title, Book of Coral Propagation, Vol. 1
Reef Gardening for Aquarists (450 pages, www.readingtrees.com) and will
release the second volume of the series in 2003. He
co-founded the Pittsburgh Marine Aquarist Society with the
inimitable Bob Dolan. He was schooled at Carnegie-Mellon
University and U. Pitt, and has a BA in English Literature. Other
interests include African felids, music and studio arts. "I
have thirty-two years on this planet and I'm very grateful to
be apprenticed to life. Wise and kind friends like Bob Fenner and
the WWM crew make the journey ever so much more enjoyable!"
March 2002
|
Here's Antoine and friends
and his old greenhouse culture facility in PA
The Xeniid fruits of
Anthony's labors. |
Peter Catterick; Tony man
about the world, general rub of most jokes. Pete's originally
from York (kinda looks like a Roman gene-drift about... spent 15
years with brother in Swaziland, southern Africa... has lived with
Bob and Di for a decade and a half or so (we keep moving, but
somehow he manages to find us). He dives, keys as fast, well as
Miguel... oh and is our principal videographer... Now if we could
only manage to edit, get some of the footage on WWF's giganto
server... |
Peter wishes he
could get this camera removed from his head.
|
Adam Cesnales Hi all, I was
only going to send this to Bob for the crew section of WWM, but
since most of you don't know me at all and those that do pretty
much only know that I like sushi and beer, I decided to use this
opportunity to introduce myself. For the site: My name is Adam
Cesnales. I live near Pittsburgh, Pa and have been keeping marine
aquaria for about 15 years, and a reef tank (or a few) for about
five. I have a BS in biology with a minor in chemistry and work as
a perfusionist (we're the folks that take over while your heart
is stopped during open heart surgery). I have always been obsessed
with all things marine. I take enormous pleasure in having a little
slice of the reef in my home, and consider the well being of the
animals that are in captivity for my pleasure to be a tremendous
responsibility. I am grateful for the opportunity to be here at WWM
helping folks who share that sense of joy and responsibility.
I'm funny looking. Reef tanks are pretty, so attached is a
photo of part of my 135 mixed reef. I also have a 92 corner reef
that is hopefully destined to become a dedicated Heteractis
magnifica/A. Ocellaris display, and a small dedicated system for
rearing Banggai cardinal fish. |
Mmm, Adam's tank... not him per
se |
John (aka Magnus) Champlin I
recently have been contacted by an acquaintance of mine, Jeni
(lovingly referred to as Pufferpunk). She had thought that I would
be able to help your awesome site with answering questions. I guess
the help i have given Jeni in the past makes her think that I'd
be right up your alley. I must say that the thought of helping out
such an impressive site is extremely exciting. I have visited your
site for many years and gained quite a bit of knowledge myself, and
would love to be able to give something back to your for all the
help over the years. <Outstanding> I'm 25 years old, and
have been keeping tanks for close to a decade now. Started the way
many people start into this hobby, i purchased a dollar goldfish
and a 10 gallon tank. Well The goldfish is still alive and well
(about 10 inches long now), and since the 10 gallon tank, I've
expanded to at one point having over 15 tanks going between my home
and my office. With the economy taking a weird turn, I was forced
to cut back on many of my tanks. But, I still have 7 tanks (ranging
in size from 3 gallons to 150 gallons) going at home, with my 8th
being a 100 gallon marine puffer tank due to be set up within the
next month. I've kept Freshwater, Brackish, and marine tanks
over the years. Focusing on two varieties of fish (not kept in the
same tanks mind you). But, I used to raise many different varieties
of knifefish (glass, African, royal clown, albino clowns). My
largest and most impressive knife was my 24 inch long female clown
knife. Which was given her own 150 gallon tank. But, my true love
was caring for Pufferfish. hence the reason i had gotten into
brackish (for my figure 8's and my Green spotted puffers) thus
leading me into my marine tanks. I've kept Emeralds, South
Americans, Green spotted, figure eights, dogface, porcs, Burrfish
for many years. Many of these fish were given to me, I kept them
for months, cared for them nursed them to health and found them
suitable homes. I have also cared for many other fish and animals
over the years. I've kept Eels, lungfish (which was adopted by
my brother and his coworkers as their company mascot), barbs,
bettas, catfish, happy community fish (tetras, gouramis, etc...),
Scats, Gobies, saltwater fish like triggers, morays, Clowns, and
much more. I realize a long sentence with fish names isn't that
exciting, so lets leave it at.. I've cared for quite an
assortment of fish. <Yes, and more to go> I'm currently
in the middle of setting up my one website, but at least I do have
some photos up online if you would like to see them. (please excuse
the mess... just placed them online until I finished the layout and
style sheets for the future site) a few random pics thrown on a
table. Here you can see my large clown knife. http://xanadu.ambrosiasw.com/~jchamplin/table.html
<Very nice> I currently haunt quite a few forums answering
questions for people in fresh, brackish, and saltwater areas. But,
more specifically I'm moderating a great new website called
Reefnut ( www.reefnut.com).
Where I was contacted by the site owner to write an article dealing
specifically with pufferfish. You can see the article at: http://www.reefnut.com/Puffer%20Article.htm
I had turned him towards puffers the previous months, and he was
quite impressed with my knowledge, and was honored to be asked to
write a featured article on his site. I'm an animal lover, I
live on a farm, have a small herd of cows, a horse, a cat, lost my
dog to cancer sadly, and a home full of fish tanks. I'm more
than willing to send you a bio and references about my experience
and knowledge. <This will suffice John. You obviously are
learned, passionate re the hobby, desirous to share> |
Above: The Man
Below: His Tank
|
Jason (Jas)
Chodakowski, born in Washington D.C. and lived in London,
England; Florida; Massachusetts; and now San Diego, California.
Through the years I've tried multiple times to get a college
degree but always seem to end up working instead. Have spent many
years exemplifying the phrase Jack of all trades, and master of
none. Most recently worked as a network and systems engineer
for Connecticut Telephone. My fascination with marine fish began in
the early 80's and have kept marine tanks on and off since that
time. Have spent my time here in San Diego learning the ropes of
fish business. Currently have a fish-only system [I'm a fish
person, and less of a reef-person] and am always looking for ways
to get a larger tank into my limited amount of available space.
Thanks to Bob Fenner's encouragement, I became a certified
diver in May of 2002, and since then have moved through the PADI
ranks to become a rescue diver in addition to a couple of other
merit badges they offer. Although I've been a photo-bug for
most of my life, I've developed a fascination with underwater
photography. I take just about every opportunity I can find to put
on the scuba gear and hone the photography skills. Speaking of
which... when are we going out again? Hey man, my mailbox is
gone! JasonC returns 6/14/06 Have I really been absent that
long? <Heeeee! There you are!> Well, lookie here... I've
just finished up what I like to call my "Wet Web Media
Live" show at the Barrier Reef in Boca Raton, FL and have
returned to private life. <Enjoying it?> If you'll have
me back, I'll be more than happy to start answering questions
again. <Oh yes... Be chatting. BobF> |
"Does this T-Shirt make me look
fat?"
|
Donald Clarke Hi Bob,
<Don> Don Clarke (aka Fish Soup) here. Sabrina emailed me
about joining the WWM crew. I would be happy to help. Kind of new
to all this myself. My father and I shared the hobby when I was
younger. We had a dozen FW tanks around the house. I started
breeding birds at age 20 and continued until last year. Almost 30
years. I traded the last of my breeders for a 55 gallon tank and
started doing research on fish, mostly plecos. I would feel most
comfortable helping new people with cycling, and answering
questions concerning catfish and South American cichlids. General
FW stuff. I'm weak on African cichlids, medications and have no
SW experience. <Ahh, we have many more questions, need for
inspiration in your fields> If you feel I could be a help
I'd love to give it a shot. Don ClarkeHi! Another new member
here. I hail from the Philly suburbs, lived in this area my entire
life. I'm 49, will hit the big 50 at the end of the year.
<Ugg, I'm still older... but a smaller percentage so every
moment!> My "Fish life" started before I can remember.
My father and I shared about a dozen tanks, mostly SA cichlids, a
few West African, plecos, Corys and some assorted community fish.
We bred a number of them including Dempseys, Jewel Cichlids,
Peacocks, Convicts. Also some bubble nesters, dwarf Gourami,
paradise and Bettas. <Neat> I have also had a lifetime love
of birds. I left the fish hobby at age 20 when I married. Petless
and in a small apartment, I talked my wife into a small cage
<Wasn't it cramped? Heee!> and a pair of Zebra Finches. I
was hooked after my first clutch of eggs hatched. I got serious
with it after the death of my parents when we moved back into the
home I grew up in. Peaked at 25 cages in two spare bedrooms, had 17
going when my wife and I divorced. (Go figure!) I was working six
days a week and the seventh was spent clearing cages. That got old
quick, so about a year ago I sold off all my breeders and set up a
55 gallon fish tank. I found this site while researching cycling
and was helped by Sabrina. Since then I have added a ten gallon QT,
but I'm resisting the urge to greatly expand my number of
tanks. So most of my hands on experience is about 30 years old. But
I have spent many hours searching the net and getting up to speed
on all the new technology and info that did not exist in the
60's and 70's. Wow, were my eyes opened! I couldn't get
enough! Things my father had taught me (water changes, a primitive
form of cycling, using UGF's before bio wheels) were now
explained. Most exciting of all were these "new" plecos!
I had both Commons and Royals as a kid, but never the info to keep
them properly. Now I do, or at least I hope so. I currently have 3
Albino Bristlenose and 3 LDA33, Big spot Plecos. They were bought
small and the plan is to set up a pair of each in a breeding tank
and leave the odd man out in the 55. Also 4 C. sterbae, 2 SAE and
about a 18 assorted small dither fish. I change A LOT of water!
<Some loricariids now!> I feel most comfortable helping
newcomers with cycling questions, species compatibility, SA
cichlids, catfish and some general maintenance issues. I'm a
freak on water quality and tend to blame most problems on poor
upkeep and planning. "My hood fell in the tank and
electrocuted my fish" "What's the ammonia
reading?" That's me! <Great!> Other interests
include hunting, fishing, downhill skiing, chess and poker. I also
started collecting rocks as a kid. As I got older, the rocks got
better and now I have a very tiny eBay business selling colored
gemstone ear studs. I use any profits to buy more gems and have
started a small collection. Nothing real valuable, no diamonds or
anything. Mostly small sapphires, a few opals and some very nice
garnets. I do it for fun, not money. I just fill the adds with
"Stud" jokes and snap a picture. I've met a number of
ladies this way! Like I said, I do it for the fun! I really want to
thank Sabrina and Bob for this opportunity to share what I have
learned. But mostly I'm looking forward to learning more
myself. <Ho ho! Let's see what you say a few months, years
from now!> Don Clarke (aka Fish Soup) ps Picture attached.
I'm the one in the glasses. <Thanks again Don. Bob
F> |
Don and his human!
|
Heather Cooan aka Linearchaos
Hi there, <Hello Heather> I have been recruited by PufferPunk
to help answer questions concerning my favorite fish, the puffer! I
began keeping fish in 2001 and fell in love with puffers shortly
after. I have kept most fresh and brackish water species and have
begun to keep saltwater puffers in last couple of years. Im
currently running seven tanks for a total of 536 gallons of water
and am keeping ten different species of puffer fish. <That's
a lot of puffers!> I have been answering questions concerning
puffer behavior, disease, identification, compatibility,
environment, water quality, diet, and general care for the past
couple years. I answer these questions as a staff member on
http://www.thepufferforum.com/
http://www.thepufferforum.com
http://www.aqua-addiction.com/
http://www.aqua-addiction.com
and http://www.grimreefers.com/
<To your credit you have likely saved MANY fishes, hobbyists>
I am familiar with answering questions on such parasites and
bacterial infections as Cryptocaryon irritans (marine ick),
Amyloodinium ocellatum (marine velvet), Ichthyophthirius multifilis
(freshwater ich), Dactylogyrus (gill fluke), Gyrodactylus (skin
fluke), and their appropriate remedies regarding the sensitivity of
puffer fish. <Perhaps you can help take some pressure from
ScottF who handles the bulk of marine disease queries> My only
publication to this date is The Arrowhead Puffer: Maliciously
Miraculous published on WWM 2/28/04. I do have other articles in
the works and I hope to publish them in the next few months.
<Real good> My current projects include observing the
Takifugu ocellatus, a marine puffer that is rumored to be rare and
difficult to maintain in captivity and composing the information
into an article. Heather Cooan |
|
Which fish drink beer? New to the
Crew, Roy Crumrine - 4/24/2006 Bob: <Roy> It was a real
pleasure meeting you and getting to hang out for awhile and talk
detritus. <Indeed!> Hopefully, we'll have an opportunity
to bump into each other soon. <I have seen the future... well,
parts of it... blearily... and yes, many good times ahead>
Meanwhile, I look forward to helping you with WWM. <And...
welcome to it!> <Bob Fenner> |
|
Mike Dandaneau Dear Bob;
I've tried to send this e-mail twice to the
[email protected] address and each time it's come back as
undeliverable, so I'm going to paste it here one more time and
hope it goes through. You may want to take a nap if you doze off
half-way through.**grin** Sincerely, Mike Dandaneau <Am
concerned re the WWM mail server... Zo has sparked an alarm this AM
re some hacking activity that might be going on> Dear Bob and
All; Mike Dandaneau here, and first off thanks for the compliments
on the photos.....I also saw your comment about possibly joining
your team in answering Q&A's and frankly, would be
flattered. <Actually, just a note of surprise at how much
you've obviously been doing in the hobby... and that you
haven't, perhaps "written up" your experiences,
particularly with the spawning of "oddball" marines, the
collection, keeping of some of your animals like the stargazer.>
This, of course, leads to how and where. I'm fairly computer
literate, but not versed in HTML (perhaps the old dog thing, or
even just a tad intimidated and lazy) . <Mmm, a few folks
"here" are "real computer types"... I barely
speak, write English...> As you may have seen in my profile,
I'm a disability retired ex-police officer (spinal injury
w/severe chronic pain) since 1987 and have been residing here in
Clearwater, a suburb of Tampa, Florida, since 1980. <Yes, I did
read this on WWF> I started in FW as a young child and spawned
my first egg layers (Blue Gouramis) when 7 years old and have had
at least one aquarium ever since, often MANY more (up to 150
personal tanks at one time). Although always interested in marine
zoology, my introduction to the sea was in 1967 when the USAF sent
me to Eglin AFB at Ft. Walton Beach Fl. for Survival training prior
to being shipped to Viet Nam, where I learned to NEVER pick up a
medium conch shell and place it in a front trouser pocket....this
was also my introduction to hermit crabs. <Yowch> Upon
returning stateside, I spent my last two years in the Air Force at
Eglin AFB again, and had set up my first tank within 2 weeks of
arriving and have never gotten the salt out of my shoes since. From
1970-1980 I returned to Michigan, where I managed a pet shop for a
couple of years that was early on into marine aquariums before
finally going into law enforcement as a patrol officer. <A good
introduction to human tolerance 0;> For the past 24 years
I've avidly collected and studied local marine life with my two
biggest frustrations being that there was little to nothing written
about much of what I encountered, particularly from an
aquarist/husbandry point of view, thus much of my experience was
experimental, aided by as many books as I could find on the
subject(s). Which brings me to my second field of inquiry.....what
is the suggested/recommended length for articles submitted to your
site? <Oh, will cc Scott.F and Adam.C here re... they're the
co-editors of CA> In the FAQs I saw that Word Pad was an
accepted format, but saw no indication of other parameters. I was
introduced to your site, by the way, by Leslie Leddo, although
I'd frequently run across your Q&A's previously
whenever I was researching a particular species or genus and was
impressed by your knowledge as well as your occasional sense of
humor. My favorite original quote is: " I tried being serious
once and they locked me up for depression, so I quit!" Well,
ALMOST quit.**grin** Any assistance would be appreciated and if I
get out of line in any of your member forums, please let me know.
<Don't know as there are limits here... perhaps general
civility> Since I don't travel well, I'm pretty well
housebound when I'm not in the water collecting, thus spend a
LOT of time on the PC. As I've mentioned in my profile, I LOVE
meeting fellow marine hobbyists and have a three bedroom home here
with a guest room always open for someone who would enjoy BSing
about the sea and the hobby and possibly try their hand at local
shallow water collecting. The reason the invitation is to singles
or couples ONLY by the way, is not because I don't enjoy
children, but rather because another of my hobbies, a tribal bladed
weapons collection occupies several walls and is definitely NOT
child safe!**grin** Although I've probably left out many things
you feel are important to know, I also feel that I'm
approaching the point where I need a publisher now so will simply
close by saying that you have a WONDERFUL site and that I'd
appreciate any and all information that you think I need to know or
wish to volunteer. Sincerely, Michael (Mike) J. Dandaneau
Clearwater, Florida <Mmm, make it known if I may be of
service... am facile at introducing folks to the print side of the
hobby and business of content provision in our interest... and if
you should have the time, notion to help respond to queries, would
greatly enjoy what time you can share with us. Bob
Fenner><Oh! Mike, shall I "sign you up"... Other
than most topics in marine fields, what categories of questions do
you feel interested, confident in responding to? Bob F> |
|
Marie Dempsey 6/12/07 Hi Bob,
So glad to get a chance to talk with you and your crew at IMAC. I
had a great time and was honored that Michelle and Scott suggested
that I could possibly help out. I have only been in the hobby since
2002 and within that short time have become completely addicted!
Currently I have a 160-gallon reef tank, which is primarily SPS
coral. The system was set up in March of 2003 and has been a
terrific learning experience. I have had the pleasure of serving on
the BOD of the Marine Aquarium Society of Michigan as past vice
president and current secretary. As far as a bioI live in West
Bloomfield, Michigan with my husband (Steve) and kids Nicky (7)
Jackie (13) and Ryan (19). I have a Bachelor of Science in Nursing
and a Master of Science in Anesthesia. As a Nurse Anesthetist I
practice at several of the local hospitals and surgery centers. I
love teaching and coordinate the Continuing Education program for
Crittenton Hospital in Rochester, MI. and have taught pharmacology
at Mercy College, Detroit, MI. Recently, I set up a 29-gallon
saltwater reef tank at Twin Beach Elementary School. It is both
amazing and wonderful to see how fascinated the kids are in
learning about the tanks inhabitants. My goal is to have set up
tanks in both the middle and high school by next year and implement
an educational program. For fun I play guitar and keyboards (and am
awful at it), kick box (great for frustration), dive, ski and
travel.. love to travel! Once again, thank you for this
opportunity, Sincerely, <Outstanding Marie. And welcome to our
Crew.> |
|
Mr. Firemouth/Rich Dietz bio.
12/29/07 Hi Bob, <Mr. F> Well a new year is upon us and I
hope that yours is filled with sunny days and great dives! I wish I
had the funds to travel! Hawaii is at the top of the list with
Australia trailing right behind! <I say come on out!> It has
been a great honor to help WWM this past year! This site is great
and helps so many! I look forward to 2008! <Me too> I thought
I would drop you a bio of me and some pics... <Ah, good> My
name is Rich Dietz and I have been in the hobby for over 25 years.
I have kept hundreds of tanks and bred many freshwater species of
fish and propagated many corals. I currently maintain a fish room
with about 1,000 gallons of fish and corals in separate systems.
<Wow!> I have bred thousands of Firemouth Cichlids in the
last 25 years and have been line-breeding these fish for size and
color for the last decade. My lifetime goal is to produce a true
Albino Firemouth mutation. Thorichtys meeki have been my lifetime
addiction! I am an Administrator at www.uberfrags.net and advise
many on saltwater topics, I am also a 'Mentor' at
www.tropicalresources.net which is directly affiliated with
Tropical Fish Hobbyist magazine, and I am a Moderator of
www.aquamojo.com a site dedicated to cichlids. I belong to many
clubs including the American cichlid Association, 2 local St. Louis
reef clubs, a Chicago reef club, and several other cichlid
societies/clubs across the United States. I believe that joining a
local aquarium club/society is one of the best things any hobbyist
can do to continue to mature in this great hobby! Hopefully I will
be an asset to the Crew! Rich-aka-Mr. Firemouth <Real good Rich.
Will post. Thank you again for your help. BobF> Here are some
bio pics... My wife Nicole and I underwater at Coral World, St.
Thomas U.S.V.I. Note the dive helmets as I am a non-swimmer. And
our cruise pic after dinner. Great time in the Caribbean! Rich |
|
Scott Fellman Olde bio. (see below) I have been a
lover/admirer of aquatic life since I was a kid, and an aquarium
hobbyist since I was about 6 or 7 years old. Despite that, I
still turned out reasonably normal (I think!). I am very active
in my club (Marine Aquarium Society of Los Angeles County). My
special interests are the selection of appropriate marine fishes,
Centropyge angelfish, blennies, macroalgae and developing
appropriate captive environments for the animals that we keep. I
have an enormous passion for the hobby and learning, sharing,
mentoring others to achieve success. When I first read CMA I
realized right then and there that you and the WWM crew have a
philosophy on marine aquarium keeping that is absolutely
consistent with mine. The moral and ethical obligation that we
have to responsibly acquire, keep, and nurture the marine animals
that we love so much is so important to me- and I want to instill
that sense of obligation to my fellow hobbyists. I believe that
there is so much that we can all learn together-and so much that
we can do to help each other in this hobby. It would really fun
to assist others with their hobby endeavors in any way that I
can! I have a serious amount of energy and enthusiasm for this
sort of thing. On the lighter side, I had the opportunity to down
a beer or two with you at MACNA after the Saturday banquet-we
rapped about the South Pacific (my favorite place), surfing,
Centropyge angels, and the Island that I have a special
connection to. After downing a couple of beers, I somehow
recalled a rather obscure passage from your book- and you said
something like, "Dude- you either need another beer, or need
to read some different books!" A classic moment- because I
essentially have destroyed my copy of CMA by re-reading it so
much (get the other book done already!).
Updated Bio/Pic Date: Fri, 27 Feb 2009
07:13:57 +0000 Hey Bob, <Scotter> Hope all is well with
you! <Ah yes> It's been an amazing year for me...much
has changed for the positive in my "fishy career".
It's been an absolute joy traveling around the country to
clubs and events talking fish! What an amazing experience!
<Ahh, as I tried to encourage you, others> And this year
looks even more amazing: MACNA, IMAC West, Reef-a-Palooza, and
several other club events and mini-conferences! And...I may be
speaking internationally for the first time this year, too. More
articles being published, too, and all kinds of other potential
opportunities are arising. I owe much of this success I am
enjoying to the experience that I have gained through WWM. I hope
that everyone on the Crew realizes how much the WWM experience
can provide...The opportunities are limited only by one's
desire to get involved in the hobby. I thank you and all of the
Crew for the wonderful experience that my time at WWM has
provided for the last 6+ years (can it really be that long?).
Looking forward to the next 6 years with WWM. <Good> In the
interest of keeping current, I did want to update a few things in
my bio. Particularly a reference to my girlfriend being a
"Big Island local" . As you may be aware, I'm in a
totally different relationship now, and the update is most
appreciated! The rest of my bio is just fine. I've attached a
more recent pic, as well. <Will amend> Thanks much for your
support and continued friendship. Looking forward to seeing you
in Detroit..and Denver! Regards, ScottF. PS- no need to run this
email in the daily FAQs, please! <All right. BobF>
|
Re: Speaking at MARS 8/9/05 Hi Alan and
Pam:
Bob cc'd me about being available as a speaker to your club
this fall. I would certainly be interested in presenting at one
of your meetings. Unfortunately, the September 16 meeting
corresponds to the MACNA conference, which I will be attending.
October would be a possibility, if you are interested. I live in
the Los Angeles area. I am a lifelong hobbyist with over 30 years
of fishkeeping experience. I've been privileged to work with
WetWebMedia for the past 3 years. In addition to answering
questions on the "Daily FAQ" page, I am co-editor of
our online magazine, "Conscientious Aquarist". I've
had several articles published both online and in print media
(FAMA), and have had the pleasure of working with Bob and Anthony
on the "Reef Invertebrates" book. I am active in my
local club, the Marine Aquarium Society of Los Angeles
County.
My particular areas of interest are marine aquarium husbandry (
i.e.; Nutrient Control and Export, Nuisance Algae control,
Quarantine of Marine Fishes and Invertebrates), Proper Stocking,
and Planning and Creating Biotopic Marine Aquaria. If any of
these topics would be of interest to your members, please let me
know. By all means, do contact Steven Pro. He's a super-nice
guy and an excellent speaker (in fact, Steve's visiting us in
LA this weekend!) on a variety of topics. Also, Barry Neigut can
give a great presentation on Clam Husbandry and Selection, and is
also one of the nicest guys you'll meet! Very Truly, Scott
Fellman
|
Welcome Brandon Foster to the
Crew 3/3/07 All, Brandon has been trying to help me "make
real" our rotating banner... Turns out he is also able and
willing to help us in responding to queries! Thank you for sharing,
BobF Here is the bio that you requested, it is kind of funny they
make you do this stuff in school, and right now I am completely
drawing a blank. I guess the obvious applies, I am 25, I was born
in Clayton County, Georgia. This is Metro Atlanta if you are
curious. I joined the Army in August of 2000 and moved to Columbus
Georgia. In retrospect I should have picked Seattle. When I got out
of the Army I met my wife, and stayed here. I started working for a
pet store in 2003, and after about six months I could not handle it
anymore. The I want it now, I don't care if it is a bad idea
syndrome really bothered me. It did not help that I was reprimanded
several times by management for refusing sales. I think that I am
not supposed to say whom I was working for but I can say that it
rhymes with Red's Art. After this fell through I began spending
a lot of time living off of savings that I had accrued in the
Military, and I was reading and reading right here at Wet Web Media
about various fish, and biotopes, when I had a great Idea. I
decided to start a local Aquatic society. Immediately I began
learning how to put a website together, and before long I found
myself hosting the thing out of my house, and not too long after
that, I found myself running a Web Design business. Before I knew
it I was involved in computer security. Currently I am working on a
Bachelors of Science in Computer Science with a specialization in
Information Assurance, with a minor in Marine Biology. Currently I
am a wine adviser for a local bottle shop, and in my spare time I
run Five tanks. I have a 65 gallon freshwater that I am breeding
Discus in, a 75 gallon saltwater reef, a 55 gallon saltwater fish
only, a 29 gallon saltwater coral grow out tank, and a 10 gallon
ghost shrimp tank, that I use to obtain food for a Dendrochirus
biocellatus that lives in my reef. I am interested in the
husbandry, and keeping of fish/cnidarians/decapods that are
difficult to keep. I have a wife that is very supportive of the
hobby, and a daughter named Erin that has more interest in this
than anyone I know. She is three and already knows all of the
scientific names to every creature that we have. I think that her
favorite fish would be the Discus because they will let her pet
them. The D. biocellatus will allow me to touch it too, it will
even sit in my hand, but recently I stopped this activity, because
I will almost certainly get envenomated at some point. I believe
that about covers it, in short nice to meet you all. Brandon |
|
Brenda L. Furtak 1/15/07 Dear
Bob, I have recently become acquainted with Jeni (Pufferpunk) and
through our discussions, she has suggested that I get in contact
with you regarding assisting your Crew in answering questions on
your website. I typically spend a minimum of two hours every
evening researching reef related items on the Internet and would
like to offer my assistance. <Ahh! Pleased to meet you. Jen had
mentioned your contacting us> My fascination with saltwater
aquariums began when I was around 8 years old. <A prodigy!>
As a child I would read books and visit pet shops as often as I
could. Since salt water aquariums were so difficult to keep in
those days, my mother would only allow me to have freshwater fish.
My father built me a stand so I could keep two 29 gallon tanks in
my bedroom with one below the other. I would always stay up late
viewing my aquarium, just like I do today. Now that my son has
grown I finally was able to start my life long dream. My first 90
gallon aquarium was soon followed by a 55 gallon and then a 25
gallon nano. I still keep a 48 gallon freshwater aquarium at home
in my office but suspect that will be converted to saltwater
someday. I have experience with propagation of corals such as
leathers, xenia, mushrooms, Zoanthids, yellow and green star
polyps, Anthelia, LPS such as Candy Cane, Frogspawn, and Torch
corals. I have kept SPS corals such as Montipora for over a year
now and have just started keeping Acropora. My primary love for the
hobby is with the Bubble Tip Anemone. I currently keep five in
three different aquariums. I have had the opportunity to watch and
photograph them split. Ive also had the unfortunate opportunity to
see them near death when I came home to find six inches of water in
my 90 gallon aquarium. I quickly learned that these delicate
creatures, with proper care, could also be strong enough to recover
after being out of water for several hours. The following morning
my two anemones became four--they were tiny and bleached but are
now back in good health. Since that event, I have always tried to
assist others in their BTA recovery, whether it is a power head
incident, expelled zooxanthellae, chemical war or simply underfed.
This year I will be setting up my fourth saltwater aquarium, which
will be dedicated to Rose Bubble Tip Anemones and a pair of
clownfish. This hobby still fascinates me as it did when I was a
child. I continue to research and expand my knowledge with a wide
variety of reef keeping items every day. If you think my experience
is something that would benefit WetWebMedia, I would be happy to
give it a try. Thank you, Brenda L. Furtak <Thank you for coming
forward, and welcome to our association. Bob Fenner> |
|
Simon Garratt joins the WWM Crew!
3/4/15
Hey Bob.
Hope you are well.
<Yes; thank you>
This is my main private email address:
[email protected]
Let me know what you need me to do etc..
<Ahh; I thank you for your participation. Am looking for your input in helping
others on WWM: Do send along a brief bio. and pic to post, and log-in when you
have time.
Our login:
https://maiXXX.safesecureweb.com/
Email address there in the tray: [email protected]
PW: XXX
Some bits re responding here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/WWMAdminSubWebIndex/crewsupwebmail.htm
Feel free to express your personal views re better products, worse... of course.
The Net is semi-forever.
Kind regards
Simon.
<Welcome to our association Si.
Re: WWM
Many thanks Bob much appreciated. I’ll pop in later this evening when i get
home.
<Real good Si>
Kind regards and many thanks for the invite.<Indeed a dream fulfilled for me; to
be able to interact w/ friends; promote the trade, hobby success... B>
Simon. |
|
Sue Garrett WWM
Bio
My love of turtles started
when I was 8 years old. I begged my father relentlessly to
buy me one of the mini turtles with the plastic oasis (and
requisite palm tree) like my best friend up the street had.
Thankfully he said, No! Fortunately, though, we lived near
a stream, so I had plenty of box turtles to occupy my time.
My fascination with turtles
resurfaced again years later when I just happened to be visiting
Heron Island, Australia during the time of year when the
endangered baby green sea turtles were hatching on the beach.
(Ironically, before becoming a marine sanctuary, Heron
Island used to be the site of a turtle soup factory.) So I
landed up spending almost my entire time there either escorting
hatchlings from their nest, across the beach and into the water
to protect them from the birds; or carrying them back to the
beach after they accidentally followed the artificial light and
literally showed up scratching at the door of my room every
night! The next year, my family teased me that I must have
been the reason why the green sea turtles were reportedly
downgraded from endangered to threatened that year!
Several years later, as
fate would have it, another turtle that had lost his way showed
up (again) right on my doorstep! But this time, instead of
a baby green sea turtle, it turned out to be one of those same
mini turtles my best friend had when I was young! Even more
curious was the fact that although I live on a pond, that species
is neither native to my area, nor lives in that pond. Its
still a mystery to this day how he landed up there. So, all
I can conclude was that this must have been my childhood wish
finally come true it just took a while! When I started
researching how to care for him, however, I was shocked to find
out that he actually wasnt a mini turtle after all, but instead a
baby red-eared slider turtle that would eventually grow to be the
size of a dinner plate. And that the only reason they were
mini years ago is because they rarely lived beyond a few
months. I was also very surprised to find out that millions
still continue to die each year because of poor care and other
atrocities. Since that day, Ive learned a lot more about
semi-aquatic turtles (much of it thanks to sites like WWM!), and
would like to now share what Ive learned (and am still learning!)
with others so that they, like me, will give their turtles the
appropriate care they need in order to be able to live the long
and healthy life they deserve.
When Im not devoting my
time to the turtle cause (or my two kids!), I spend whats left of
it (ha!) on the human side of preventive health care. After
graduating with a BS in nursing years ago, I initially worked in
orthopedics/sports medicine, then shifted over to health
promotion and disease prevention. I worked for several
years in health information consulting before taking time off to
raise children. Im currently taking some science, writing,
and statistics courses through the American Medical Writers
Association where I hope to eventually write about the latest
scientific research taking place in the area of preventive
medicine associated with aging and lifestyle-related
illnesses.
|
Please welcome Sue Garrett to the Crew!
6/7/10
Hello Sue,
Welcome to WWM! Having already read some of your stuff, I look
forward very much to seeing you share that experience with our
Daily FAQ visitors.
Cheers, Neale
Thank you, Neale! I've read a lot of your helpful
information, too! I was pleasantly surprised when Bob asked me to
join the crew. I'm happy to have the chance to give back to
WWM & crew for all the valuable advice you and they have
given me. I feel privileged to be associated with such a highly
esteemed crew! I do hope I can be as much help to others as you
and Darrel have certainly been to me. I wouldn't even be
answering any questions if it wasn't for both of you! Thank
you for your kind welcome,
Sue
Bio and pic 6/7/10
Hi Bob!
<Suze!>
I attached my bio and a photo above is this along the lines of
what you were looking for? The last paragraph is my actual bio
and is brief; the rest of it is more the story of how I landed up
getting started with turtles (which I thought was probably more
applicable!) However, that part IS long, so let me know if youd
like me to shorten it so that its similar in size to the last
paragraph. The photo is a little blurry because its cropped, but
hopefully it will suffice. Unfortunately, the rare time Im even
IN a photo, its typically either with kids or as part of a
background scene, so its hard to actually see me!
Let me know how this works for you (or not!)
-Sue
<Thanks for sending this along. Will post. B>
|
James Gasta (Salty Dog) joins the WWM Crew Ok Mr. Fenner,
<Please call me Bob> I worked for 31 years as a Field
Service Engineer/Industrial Electrician. I retired in my
50's to open my own industrial controls business which is
doing quite well. I am married to a wonderful wife and
have one daughter who has graduated from college and is an ultra
sound tech. My first saltwater aquarium started back
in 1968, and have had one set up since then. My, how
the hobby has progressed since then. I feel pretty comfortable
answering the following: Filtering Lighting Algae control
Equipment Fish load/compatibility Some invertebrates/corals
Anything in the electrical field Thank you for the opportunity to
help others get on the right track. Also feel free to edit
anything you like in my bio. I should add that I live
in Bay City, Michigan. Salty Dog (James Gasta) <Thank you
James. We have actually changed the way we sort queries, so you
are welcome to choose which you'd like. Welcome to our
association. Bob Fenner>
Memory tips? -- 01/13/2010
Bob,
Do you have any tips/advice as to preserving one's memory?
It's getting to a point for me, that soon I'll be able to
hide my own Easter Eggs.
Cheers,
James
I do... vitamins, daily exercise, crossword puzzles, jumbles...
Sudoku? And mnemonic devices... These and engaging ones mind as
often and vigorously as possible/practical. Oh, and carrying
around ID lest you be "picked up" and can't
remember your
name, place. B
Articles 3/26/14
Hi Bob,
You are welcome to post the attached articles if you wish at no charge
to you. They do not have to be in the vendor area.
<Ah, I thank you. Will do right away. Deeply gratifying to find your
continuing growth in the interest James. BobF>
--
James
<Links, posted here.
http://wetwebmedia.com/Latest%20Articles.htm
B
Re: Articles 3/26/14
Thanks Bob. I think we needed something like this where a graphic
presentation can be shown as to how calcium reactors work.
<I do agree. The site could really use such for all gear, additives et
al.
B>
James
|
The "Salty Dog" and his most
lovely wife.
Barred from meet the crew
page Hi Bob, <James> I see James is barred from
the crew page again, heh? <What? Are you on the inactive side
again? Will check, fix> By the way, saw your photo in the
"More tasteful pics" wearing that leopard thing. What
on earth were you drinking that day? <Whatever it was... it
was too much! B> J
|
Welcoming NateG to the WWM Crew!
3/1/13
Here ya are Bob. Lmk if you want me to edit/cut it down to size
Hiya Bob,
<Nate>
Per your request:
For as long as I can remember I have had a strong appreciation for
living things. When I was growing up as a child in NH, it was mostly the
cuddly fluffy pets that a typical child would encounter. Over the years
that interest has evolved from this to that until I struck passion-reef
tanks.
Reef tanks started for me when my brother gave me a very unique birthday
gift; a 5 gallon pale filled with water and 3 red bellied piranha. At
this time I was at Union College in upstate NY studying Mechanical
Engineering and away from NH for the first time in my life. I would go
into the local fish store to pick up feeder fish about once a week. They
kept the tubs of feeders down in the basement which is also where they
kept all of their “saltwater” stuff. Until this point in my life (about
19 yrs old), I had no idea you could have salt water fish in an
aquarium! I mean, what the HELL is a rock fish?? Haha I realized this
was because the hobby was barely existent near my home town of
Manchester. There wasn’t a fish tank in any of my doctor’s offices. None
of my friends had fish tanks. Zip-Nothing. So when I moved back to
Manchester I jumped into a salt water tank.
Unfortunately here is an example of a sad truth that too many
encounter…an employee at a LFS said that I was fine to have 13 fish in a
29. So I did-for a few days only. Angry with myself-I picked up a copy
of “The Conscientious Marine Aquarist” and didn’t put it down or look
back. I started my reef tank over and obviously with a great deal more
success this time. I wanted to spread the idea of reef tanks to the
surrounding community so I made an attempt of a service company as a
method of achieving this goal while making some cash and working within
my passion.
Win-win right? This was around 2008 so unfortunately very few people
were willing to make the investment.
And so since then, I went back to college where I reside today, at The
University of New England studying Oceanography. Where I try and focus
on the abiotic factors that exist in aquaria that don’t just keep our
friends alive but allow them to thrive. I’m a DIY’er, I enjoy
innovation, computers, tools, or maximizing the amount of
filtration under your nano reef. When there is a will there is a way
right.
That being said, it would be an honor and privilege to be a part of the
crew and do what I can to spread the words of our messiah in the process
haha
-Nate Guerette
<Thank you for your effort of help.
I welcome you to our Crew. Bob Fenner>
Welcome to the Crew Nate!
Simon
Glad to have you join us, Nate!
-Lynn Z
Sounds like a great addition to the crew! Welcome!
Rick
Welcome aboard Nate.
---
James Gasta
|
|
Mike Giangrasso A bit about
myself, as per request. I am 14 years old, and reside on Long
Island, New York. I have several tanks at the moment, all
freshwater breeding tanks in addition to 1 reef tank, plus numerous
Rubbermaid tubs for rearing fry. I have been keeping glass boxes
for about 7 years now. I have a great interest in freshwater fishes
of the family Cichlidae, most notably the genus Apistogramma. I am
intrigued by the complex mating and behavioral habits of all
Cichlid species. At the moment, I have the following breeding
operations going on: Jellybean Parrots Rams Bolivian Rams Kribensis
Taenius Kribs Discus Angelfish Oscars Bettas Dwarf Gouramis
Bristlenose Plecos Zebra Plecos Leiurus Pufferfish (no successful
raising of fry past 1 month, at this point) Apistogramma
cacatuoides Laetacara dorsiger Harlequin Rasboras Werneri
Rainbowfish Paradise Fish Chocolate Gouramis (eggs but no fry just
yet) Equally fascinating to me are coral reef ecosystems, namely
symbiosis occurring in coral reefs. My all-time favorite tank is my
reef, a 15 gallon long glass aquarium with 5 gallon Refugium.
Innumerous species of coral, fish, and inverts reside there. I take
a lot of pride in the fact that it is only 3 months old, yet has
thriving SPS and clams. I feel that, as long as you fully
understand how an ecosystem works, you can attempt seemingly
impossible things. I mentioned earlier that I was interested in
symbiosis. I have nearly every form of symbiosis in my reef.
Anemone and Clown Goby and Pistol Shrimp Christmas Tree Worms
Cleaner Shrimp Acro Crabs and, of course, Buttfish and Sea
Cucumber. I promised to keep it short and sweet, so I'll sum
everything up. I am the founder of Death byDyeing.org, an
organization geared towards the stopping of dyeing of ornamental
aquarium fishes. I am also the webmaster of PAWS-LI.org, and a volunteer at my LFS
for 4 years. I started out with goldfish, and moved up to Ritteri
Anemones and Tridacnid clams. But didn't we all? |
|
Lorenzo (Zo) Gonzalez, WWM/F
resident computer guy. Photographed by JasonC, at about -35 feet,
somewhere very near Cozumel. |
|
Welcome Brian Griffin to the Crew Re: Ready to
serve 9/21/08 Added a couple of lines to Bio: Here's
a bio and pic <Got it! Man! You're old too! B> Brian
Griffin setup his first saltwater aquarium back in the mid 70s
while he was attending Florida State University. From that moment
on, he fell in love with the hobby. Over the years, he has had
many reef aquariums, the largest being a 8x4x2 lookdown system
with a total of just over 1000 gallons. He became known in the
industry when he started Reefers A Marine Aquaria Store back in
2000. The company closed its doors in 2002, but Brian has stayed
in touch with the industry. His love of this hobby is
unsurpassed. His industry contacts are above reproach. Brian is
an expert at Internet marketing and owns a web design business.
Recently, he worked with ZeroEdge Aquarium and helped them bring
the ZeroEdge name to a new level in the industry. Today is
"residing" at a LFS located in North Plainfield, NJ
called Ocean Gallery 2 (http://www.oceangalleryii.com). Hell be
sticking with what he knows best when it comes to answering
emails marina aquaria. <Will supplant. B>
|
Re: Ready to serve...
Lost pic attached my friend!! <I'll be... you look younger
than your younger pic! Will place. B> |
WWM Crew: meet Minh Hyunh 12/01/08 Thanks for
the touching introduction, Jessy. It's a pleasure, Mr.
Fenner. I do have time throughout the day to contribute to WWM
and would like to give back to the community one way or another.
My experience is primarily in reef tanks, particularly in coral
husbandry but I can do my best in other areas as necessary. If
you would like to know more, feel free to ask. Cheers, Minh Huynh
<Ahh, please do send along a brief bio. (and pic if you'd
like) for us to post... so folks can who are interested can know
you a little better. And... thank you for sharing! Bob Fenner>
WWM Crew meet Minh 12/2/08 Thank you for the
kind and warm welcoming, everyone. I have read many of your
responses on WWM over the years and value your knowledge and
experience greatly. I hope to continue to learn from your
expertise as a contributing member of WWM. I'm usually not
very good at writing about myself but I feel I should not break
tradition so here's a bit of background. I, like many of you,
have been keeping aquariums since early childhood. Before my
family immigrated to America, I have fond memories of helping my
grandfather maintain a massive pond of Koi fish in our home in
the central coast of Vietnam. When my family immigrated to
America in the early 1990s, I've kept various freshwater,
planted and marine aquariums as well as Koi ponds in hour home in
Southern California. At the moment, I am occupied with two reef
aquariums for research in coral husbandry with emphasis on some
species notorious for poor survival in captivity. Some of these
species include Goniopora, Catalaphyllia jardinei and
nonphotosynthetic species such as Dendronephthya and gorgonian
(some examples can be viewed here:
http://www.vimeo.com/user853505/videos). I hope my research,
along with others will propel the reef hobby beyond the frontier
of azooxanthellate animal husbandry. The philosophy I've
adopted from some pioneer aquarists place heavy emphasis on the
natural methods like that of the old adage, "More Biology,
Less Technology." Unfortunately, I feel the reef segment of
our hobby has progressively moved away from this philosophy. I
hope to be able to offer a non-contemporary, perhaps retro, spin
on the problems facing budding aquarists today. I hope to spend
some time to get familiarize with WWM and its intricacies before
diving into the deep end so please pardon any silly questions
from this way. Cheers to a great holiday season. Best wishes,
Minh Huynh P.S. As requested, attached is a photo of my wife and
I at the Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach. Please say
"Hi" if you ever see my mug at Scripps Pier. <Ahh! I
do hope to meet you... will you be coming to the SDMAS holiday
party on the 7th? It's at our house in Mira Mesa. Hope to see
you here. BobF>
|
|
Marina Harding I have several
years of experience in the hobby, retail, setup/maintenance
business, and import/export arenas. First bitten by "the
bug" in 1986, rapidly needed to support my habit. What soon
followed was my employment by an old-timer in the business, who
taught me a great deal. Have experience with freshwater (Africans,
goldies, koi, ponds, livebearers, et al) and saltwater, eventually
becoming the shop's reef specialist, along with some
herps/exotics. In 1993 I began working the distribution center of a
large retailer. This is where I met Bob, and after about a ten year
hiatus have found myself here. I also have two sons, now (2004)
aged 15 & 17. And now.. I live in the tiny town of
Pioneer, in the lower altitudes of the California Sierra Nevada
Mountains, with my fiancé, youngest son,
future father-in-law, and my "foster" daughter, Frances.
We recently vacationed in Tulamben, Bali, Aug-Sept 2004, where
those of us not dive certified received our PADI certifications.
Some photos of our trip can be seen here: http://64.202.180.95/Images/images.html
While we're at it, we'd like to greet Ni-Luh, the new
daughter of one of our good friends in Bali, Wayan, and his wife,
Ni-Wayan. |
Marina in 2003
Marina at some depth - Tulamben, Bali "The
Drop-off".
|
Gage Harford Wow, this is
fun. I am 22, I have an associates degree in computer technology,
used to work web hosting tech support, currently I am in training
for a customer service job. <Yikes! Another computer type! Well,
at least you're customer svc. oriented (VeryGiantBigG)>
Before college I was a stocker at PetSmart. <You've been in
the pits of Hades!> I was the aquatics guy for a small pet store
in Danville CA (where I grew up). Up until a week ago I was working
at a local fish store in Concord. <Great! Hey, you're only
22?> My experience is mainly freshwater tropicals, cichlids, and
turtles. I am working on my first reef tank. I am currently
converting my garage into my fish room. <Wowzah> I'm also
working on setting up my 125gal freshwater plant tank I have never
been diving, but plan to start someday. <Ahh, a recruit!> My
current set up includes a 20gal fancy goldfish tank, a 125 gal for
my Mexican musk turtle, a 55 planted freshwater tank, a 55gal for
my albino Oscar (he will be moving to a larger house shortly), a
29gal reef I use the term reef loosely, more like a pile of live
rock with some mushrooms and leathers hanging around), and a 72gal
pond in the back yard for my three favorite feeder goldfish.
<That about covers all our subject areas...> So that's
me, I have an obsession with this hobby that others could consider
sick, I am sure you understand. <Umm, you're in good co.
here... we're all either similarly "sick" or others
haven't gotten the word yet. Bob F> |
This is my Mexican
Musk turtle "Honey". You could almost kiss her, well,
if you did not mind losing your lips.
|
Mike Haug Bio. Where do I
start, My name is Mike Haug I am 28 years old and I live in
Pittsburgh PA. I got sucked into this hobby about 10 years ago. I
first started out as a hobbyist, then started working for a retail
pet store. Then became manager and now own a online retail store
called coral clips. god bless my wife Nicole for letting me do
this!) I can answer questions on advanced reef keeping, rare fish,
and plumbing. I saw too many people give up this hobby due to
either no advice or bad advice. I want to help people, so they do
not make the same mistakes I have made or seen people make over the
years. I hope to be a big help and keep learning myself. Reef
keeping is not a hobby but a way of life for me. |
Hey Mike,
send along a pic of your mug, will ya? |
Mike Irving/WWM -02/06/08 Bob, <Mike>
Have attached 2 pics, but at your discretion the main one called
MI (the other one is just a fun pic!), and the Bio below.
<Ahh, will post> In addition, you said you were hoping for
new help with posting replies to site. I have a little html
knowledge (what do they say about little knowledge again!) and
again, just offer any help I can in that respect. <As of now,
all is copied/pasted... some HTML looking/modifying
format-wise... but for now, we'd just like your help in
responding to queries. Am concerned not to overwhelm folks with
the opus est aspects of WWM. Cheers, BobF> Cheers, M BIO Hey!
to all at WWM and its friends, and warm wishes from the UK! My
passion for fish keeping started around 20 years ago, with the
humble goldfish, black moor and shubunkin. I progressed to
tropicals after a few years, and was a fan of the Firemouth!
Admittedly, my real experience comes from the marine side of
things and have been a keeper for around 12 years now.
Under-gravel filters, pugnacious damsels, and dead coral wow,
those were fun days early on. I progressively gathered knowledge
with the help of a very good friend, and the ever increasing
forums over here. Ive since worked on some of them, and theyve
been a great source of enjoyment to me. Since those early days,
one relationship has continued to stir me; that of the clownfish
and anemone. Having kept some of the most beautiful and rare
species, Ive had the opportunity to expand my knowledge in all
aspects of the relationship, so dont mind saying this is where my
knowledge excels. In addition, I also have a passion for
cephalopods and in particular, the cuttlefish. Ive been lucky
enough to be one of the first folks to hatch, raise, keep, breed
(and repeat the process), Sepia bandensis, and supplied to public
aquariums around Europe. Mantis shrimp take my fancy too having
kept a few in my time, but then again, so do a lot of other
things in this hobby; addictive is the word! Anyway, I live in
one of the most beautiful areas of England, with the mountains
and lakes just a short journey away; work for Her Majesty (or at
least, her government); and love scuba diving too! In fact, Ive
enclosed a picture that Bob may be brave enough to share, from a
drift dive I made around Garden reefs in the Red Sea. The other
is from the heart of the Sinai mountains. Looking forward to
working with the rest of the WWM Crew, and all of its followers.
Mike
Mike Irving joins the Crew 2-05-08 Warm
Greeting, Bob - a wee while... Hi Bob, <Mike> How you
doing? Good I hope! <Fine, thank you> I have my own site
now, really just to give some folks a place to discuss away from
the hustle. Its not majorly busy, but we get some good
discussions going. Anyway, not here to talk (write!) about that.
Im here just to offer any service I can to WWM. Ive lots of
experience this side of the pond in working on the various
forums, so theres that side of thing, but I do have a number of
areas I focus on, which may or may not be some use to you.
<!> I claim 2 fields of relative interest and enthusiasm
one you may recall, being cuttlefish/cephalopods. I hatched,
raised, kept, bred and hatched raised etc a species of cuttle
called Sepia bandensis. First here in the UK, and supplied to
Sealife Centres and various specialist keepers. Wrote about my
experiences on a website and have since supplied information and
pictures to publications and articles. <Ah, yes> My biggest
passion is probably clownfish and anemones. Im authoring a site
currently, thats taking longer than I would like, but may
illustrate a bit more (www.clownfishandanemones.com). Ive kept a
fair few pairs in my time, experimented in some dead-food
rearing, and kept some pretty rare clowns (A. latezonatus) in my
time. Same with the anemones. <Neat... so far so good... Maybe
a bit of kibitzing here... but you might consider adding
"other Clownfish pertaining sections of other sites"
sort of links... And I'll gladly send you a copy of the H.
malu...> Dont know if any of that would come in handy for you,
but if it does/could ever, then its at your disposal. If you need
some general admin done etc, menial, give me a shout. <Will
gladly link when you're ready> Before I go, I took your
advice, somewhat belatedly, and learned to dive at Sharm last
year it was immense! <Great! We're on our way back there
this May... ahead of Interzoo... if you'd like to come
along> The best thing I have ever done. I was staying in
Na'ama bay, and my house reef was dead, but even then there
was all sorts of fish, pipefish, coral etc. Loved every minute of
it, even though I was quite panicky about the mask removal and
replacement exercises, but I soon go those cracked. Dived at
Garden reefs and Sharks reef you been? <Oh yes... many
times... Always a new experience, things discovered> Maybe not
the best in the Red Sea but it still blew me away. Ended the
course with a nice drift dive at Gardens too. Cant wait to go
back, hopefully in September this year. Thinking Nuweiba, or
maybe the Nabq area of Sharm. Decisions to make, but those rare
ones in life which are nice! All my best to you, Bob. Hope this
finds you well. Mike Irving. <Mike, I do hope/trust I am
understanding you here. I do welcome your help on/with WWM...
particularly the areas of expertise, topics you feel comfortable
with. If you'd be so kind as to send along a brief bio. for
posting, and a pic (so folks can size you/us up if they're
interested)... I thank you for sharing, helping us all. Bob
Fenner
|
|
Adam Jackson Personal Bio: Currently a
sophomore in college studying business as my major, however I
am considering switching my major to Marine Biology. I enjoy a
number of activities which all seem to revolve around water,
including swimming, sailing, diving, water polo as well as
tending to my aquariums. I am a self-proclaimed
"comedian" and I enjoy using these abilities to make
friends and family laugh.
Hobby Experience: My family has been into
freshwater aquariums since before I was born, however I was
never a full participant in the hobby. My addiction....ummm I
mean participation in the Hobby began when an aprox. 170
gallon aquarium was installed into my families living room
wall and it was decided that it would become a reef tank. The
rest is history and I have spent a large part of my time
since then learning and gaining experience. I have worked in
an LFS as the head of marine livestock and I have also been
responsible for the set-up and design of many private marine
aquariums. I guess you could say I am a child of wetwebmedia
having started my "real" research there and gaining
the majority of my information there as well. Now that I have
gained my own experiences I look forward to contributing to
the site which has taught me so much.
Where to find me: I can be found chatting daily on
www.wetwebfotos.com/talk under the handle:
"Teenreefer8" Welcome Adam
Jackson back to the WWM Crew! 6/8/16
Hey Adam!
Our WWM mail login:
The group name:
PW:
Be chatting! BobF
Re: Welcome Adam Jackson back to the WWM Crew!
6/8/16
Thanks Bob
|
Re: Tank Questions and Time 1/19/06 Adam, <Hi.> My reply may have been a little terse.
Sorry, it wasn't intended to be. <No worries at all, my
friend,
just having fun.> I understood your reply to be humorous and
enjoyed it. I mean honestly, what person with 6 kids, 1 dog and 2
cats would try to find a hobby for her spare time?? <Well not
that I would ever compare my life to one of that who cares for 6
kids, I don't have that sort of talent (nor will I ever) but
I'm taking 18 units, working 30 hours a week, trying to balance
a new girlfriend, 3 tanks, answer Q's here and write articles
if that makes you feel any better, hehe. Wow didn't know I was
that busy.> I find the answers on here to be not only
informative but entertaining, because of the humor you all inject
into your replies. <I try my best.> I won't be relaying
your apologies to my husband regarding the grocery money
though-that was NOT a good idea. <Hehe I understand.> I
don't like to draw attention to
my embezzling activities.
Keep up the good work. <Thank you and good luck.> <Adam
J.>
|
Adam Jenkins
Wet Web Personal bio 6/28/09
Bob,
I noticed I was the only one without a bio. I figure its been a
couple of months. Time to whip one up!
<Yay! Will place>
I'm 31 years old. I currently reside in Ruston, Louisiana.
I've kept freshwater aquariums off and on for most of my
life. About 5 years ago I was introduced to saltwater and was
instantly hooked. The last 5 years have been a blur of reading ,
research and water changes. Most of my personal experience is in
the nano range( 55 to smaller). I've spent many hours
researching the animals and equipment best suited for them on Wet
Web and other sources. I also have a real interest in macros and
true vascular plants. My current tanks consist of a 30 gallon
mixed reef and a 55 seahorse in the works. 6 Months ago, along
with some friends , I started a small saltwater aquarium forum,
Modern
Reef Keeping. Through my site and Wet Web ,I've had the
pleasure of meeting some very interesting, knowledgeable people.
It has been a true learning experience. One that I hope will
continue.
Also, my site (MRK )will have will have a booth setup at the
Southeastern Reef Conference in Orlando. One of my sites mod.s
will be running it. ( I can't go. to close to IMAC)
I was wondering if you had the time to maybe stop by the booth
for a few? Either way I'm looking forward to IMAC and meeting
you. Adam
<Ahh! Let's do look for each other on the Queen Mary!
BobF>
Adam Jenkins 6/30/09
Bob,
I noticed Adam finally sent in a bio, without a pic! So I am
taking the liberty of sending you the only pic of him I have if
you wish to post in his bio. He will no doubt call me later with
an opinion on this!
Scott V.
<Real good. Will post. Thank you, BobF>
AdamJ going away 8/24/09
Bob,
It was a pleasure meeting you and some of the other Wet Web guys
and gals at IMAC but with my with other responsibilities I'm
afraid I no longer have time to help out at Wet Web. I have
enjoyed my short time here and greatly appreciated the
opportunity to help my fellow reefers. Hopefully in the future,
with time permitting, I can rejoin you guys. Adam Jenkins
<Ahh! Will look forward to your return Adam. Thank you.
BobF>
|
|
I'd like to be on the crew! 11/23/09
Hi WWM crew--
<Melinda>
My name is Melinda Joakimson, and I have written
in a few times (most recently, about my South American Red Tailed
Catfish and Pacu's pond with the biological filter problem,
which was solved by WWM!). I'm interested in helping the crew
answer queries if you need a hand.
I currently am a member of MonsterFishKeepers, and have tried to
be of help in every area that I have knowledge in, even if the
very best thing to do is to provide a link to Wet Web Media. On
MFK, I am justonemoretank, if anyone would like to take a look at
the (hopefully high-quality!) posts I have created in response to
tank sizes (I am active in the hopeful education of owners of
RTCs), water quality, and fish illness, and my attempts to
clearly link the three together for the benefit of the original
poster.
As for my other experience, my husband and I currently keep a 180
gallon sort-of-wannabe-reef, a 125 almost-Amazon tank (the Clown
Loaches kind of killed that idea!), a 75 with one Green Terror, a
180 with Florida Gars and Silver Dollars, and our 1000+ gallon
pond with the RTC and 3 Red Belly Pacu. I've learned most of
what I know from daily reading and perusing of WWM, as well as
the experience of keeping fish ranging from one inch to over two
feet long. We have only been keeping fish for two years, but have
learned a lot, and I look forward to learning more every day.
<Ahh!>
Most importantly, I have learned that knowing water parameters
means knowing fish health. Water quality is the most important
thing, and I am one of the members who stresses the importance of
water quality at MFK. I know people get tired of me asking, but
it is the very most important element in fish health. I hope to
enlighten others of its importance, thereby reducing fishkeeper
stress and fish death.
As for the non-fishkeeping part of my life, I am a senior
(non-traditional student) at the College of William and Mary,
majoring in English. I plan to complete my Master's Degree in
English after I graduate and teach on the college level. If
you're wondering about the non-traditional part, it's
what we're called when we're (ahem) older than the
average college student.
<Heee!>
I also volunteer at my local Living Museum as an education
assistant and Touch-Tank volunteer.
<Outstanding>
In addition, I have one dog, three cats, and a bunny who have
adopted me.
The areas I feel comfortable answering queries on would be water
quality (i.e., the Betta and goldfish issues that Neale might
need help dealing with; if not, I'm not trying to encroach on
his space!), gars, basic community setups (i.e., the mixture of
fishes that newcomers to the hobby often end up with at the
advisement of fish store employees), and, of course, Red tailed
catfish and Pacu.
I have always thought about helping WWM out, but I didn't
feel I had the time. Now, as the time I spend more and more time
on MFK trying to help so many, I realize how much time I had to
spare. I think that I'd surely have an hour to spare daily to
help others through WWM.
I would be glad to offer more information if it's needed, but
I hesitate to turn this e-mail into a novel (is it already?
Darn!). I totally understand if help is not needed, but I figured
it wouldn't hurt to let you know I'm willing to help.
Thanks,
Melinda
<I thank you for coming forward, offering your help Melinda,
and do think the WWM (by which I mean its users) could definitely
benefit from your experience and input. I welcome you. Our mail
log in is: and password:
Some notes re conventions we use in replying can be found
here:
Thank you, Bob Fenner>
Hello, just wanted to let you know...
1/20/11
Hi to whomever reads this,
It's Melinda. I've been unable to volunteer for quite
some time, but assumed after I finished school, I'd be able
to participate more frequently. However, the situation is exactly
the opposite! I'd like to thank you for allowing me to
volunteer for the time that I did, and I very much enjoyed the
experience, but now, must focus on Graduate school, trying to
find work, etc. I just wanted to officially resign my position
and again, thanks for allowing me to be a part of such a
wonderful crew!
Thanks.
--Melinda
<Ahh, understood Melinda. Hope to see you down the timeline.
BobF>
|
Photos for my bio 3/3/10
Hi Bob--
I was cruising through crew bios and realized I am
represented in (lengthy, I'll admit!) description, but
no so much in a photo... please find attached my photo as a
frog princess,
<Heeee!>
and a photo of my Red-Tailed Catfish, Guido, whose good
health I credit to WetWeb, as well as my own care and my
husband's willingness to allow me to build a 1,000
gallon indoor pond! He's a good guy, for sure!
We're discussing going to MACNA (is our anniversary
month), and I noticed a few WWM members listed as speakers
so far... the "celebrity" of my fellow crew
members causes me to feel greatly humbled to be a part of
the crew. Whenever anyone asks what it is I volunteer for,
I pull out The Conscientious Marine Aquarist, as well as my
magazines with Neale's articles, and I say, "I
work with these people." It's really an honor. I
hope that if my experience and knowledge never matches
those of some members of the crew, I have, at least, my
passion for keeping fish to make up for it!
--Melinda
<Thank you for your ongoing participation Melinda. Will
post w/ your bio. Cheers, BobF>
|
|
|
Jorie Johnson With regards to
what type of questions I'd be comfortable answering, I'd
like to stick to mostly FW fish for the time being. I can answer
simple planted aquarium questions, as I do have a 44 gal. planted
FW community tank, but you've already Sabrina, who I consider
to be the WWM FW aquarium plant (and invert, for that matter)
"goddess"! And, on that subject, I would be able to
answer relatively simple / standard FW invert questions (I've
kept ghost, Amano, cherry, and Singapore wood shrimp both in the
past and currently), but again, I imagine the more difficult
questions would be directed toward Sabrina. I would consider myself
to be most knowledgeable about 1) rainbowfish (I currently have 3
big, beautiful boesemanis, and although I don't have any
threadfins at the moment, I've kept them in the past and am
looking to get more. I've done a considerable bit of research
on rainbowfish, as I had a great deal of trouble with the species
when I first began); 2) livebearers, esp. mollies (I personally
like the hybrid balloon lyretail varieties, but Ananda, due to a
recent move, was kind enough to give me some of her more
"standard" sailfin ones - they are most beautiful as well
and I'm starting to enjoy them more and more each day!; 3)
bettas (I have two and due to losing their predecessors from old
age, have done a fair amount of research on that species as well).
Aside from the really "oddball" FW fish (incl. puffs,
which I haven't had the luxury of being able to keep yet, due
to not having enough tanks - I'm sure everyone at WWM can
relate to that!), I think I'd be able to field beginner to
advanced beginner type questions. I'm probably not ready for
super-difficult ones yet, but I'm still learning! I do have
some experience with dosing medications (antibiotics and
antiparasitics), but would not consider myself an expert in that
area. In the future, perhaps I'd be able to help out in the BW
community as well. I'm just in the process of setting up a 29
gal. BW tank, and again, due to Ananda's recent move, I was
lucky enough to inherit two knight / fandance gobies from her; I
plan to do lots and lots of research on caring for the pair well,
as I've grown quite attached to them! I have dabbled in keeping
some of my smaller molly tanks in BW conditions, but mollies, as
you know, are very forgiving fish in a certain sense. So, if there
are easy BW questions you want to lob my way, that should be OK
also. Don't know if you are looking for personal info. to share
with the crew/public as well...really briefly, I'm 30, living
in the NW burbs of Chicago with my boyfriend Chris (and 2 cats!),
working during the days as a litigation paralegal, some evenings
and weekends at Starbucks, mainly for the great discount, and in
the process of applying to part-time evening program law schools
for Sept. 2005. I've been keeping fish for about 2 yrs. now,
and I owe the majority of my knowledge to the good folks at WWM who
have taken the time to respond with patience (for the most part!)
and intellect. I've also made some good friends just from the
time I've spent on the internet with you folks, and for that,
I'm also grateful. |
I'm not sure if this somehow
got lost in the shuffle, but are the explanations/descriptions
below about myself and my fishy "skill set" sufficient
for a bio? If not, let me know and I'll try to give you
something else (just let me know what you are looking for). This
seems to be in line with what many of the other crew members have
sent you, so I figured it was OK. Also, here's a recent pic.
of me with one of my kitties, also called Bob... Take care,
Jorie
And here's
Jor in HI 5/06!
|
Misty Johnson joins the Crew!
8/22/10
Hi Bob,
<Hey Misty!>
Yes, I didsorrybeen intensely updating my web site over the past
few days and I completely forgot about it!
<Ah, glad you are still about!>
I dont have any real credentials as in a biology degreejust a
hobbyist since 2001.
<No need for real credentials otherwise. You/we/I know what we
know by many inputs... academics can be a part, but not
necessarily>
So sticking with softballs would be best for me, as Ill not risk
giving someone false information.
<Heavens no!>
Im good at finding answers via research, too (especially if the
question has already been answered by a WWM crew member). Pretty
good with compatibility questions, general equipment selections
(not the fancy stuff), parameters, etc.
<Ah, good>
Ive been a member of DFWMAS since August 15, 2001. Ive served on
the Board of Directors for the past three years and currently the
Treasurer. I have a 120-gallon reef tank with a little bit of
everything.
Sorry for getting back to you so late. The inspiration for a new
site design hit me so I plowed into getting it done before
presenting the product to a couple of larger companies and
introducing a new SKU. Would love your feedbackjust as a general
user of the internet J www.sinkdrink.com
<Very nice... I esp. like the Some happy Sink Drink for Cats
users section. Mmm, let's see, the WWM mail log in is:
XXXX
Will erect a mail infolder for you: Misty... Oh, and some notes
re conventions we've found useful posted here: http://wetwebmedia.com/WWMAdminSubWebIndex/crewsupwebmail.htm
And thank you once again for joining the WWM Crew! BobF
Cheers,
Misty
Indeed, welcome aboard, Misty.
Cheers, Neale
Welcome to the crew, Misty!
-Lynn Z
Welcome aboard Misty.
James (Salty Dog)
|
Re: Misty Johnson joins the
Crew!9/6/2010
Hi everyone,
Thanks for the warm welcome(s). I've just been lurking a bit
since joining the crew...reading how you've answered queries,
etc. So far my actual contributions have been moving spam to the
spam folder and moving Q's from the general Inbox to the
topic folders :). I'm a bit hesitant to answer that first
question, but will get to it soon enough! It's been a while
since I've set up my own tank, so I'm rusty on the basics
(plus so much has changed in the past 5-6 years!).
Anyway, looking forward to working with you!
Cheers,
Misty
Hi Misty,
C'mon in, the water is fine. You've got to get your feet
wet sooner or later. :-)
Cheers,
James (Salty)
Welcome Misty 9/7/2010
Answering the first few queries is daunting, but after you jump
in it gets easier. Take comfort in the fact that other crew
members read each other's responses and if anyone feels that
we've gone too far around the bend, they'll jump is with
additional suggestions... so you're not really going to hurt
anyone with your suggestions. The coolest thing for me is the
things that I've learned while researching the answers!
Who'd a thunk?
I assume you've been given a link to the newbie/suggestions
page where it talks about not trying too hard to correct their
spelling, etc.
Stuff on that page can save your sanity. (too late for me, as it
turns out). At some point you'll have a day where you just
want to type something like "/Sir, after hearing the way you
keep your tank, I suggest that you just ask the store to kill the
fish for you before you bring them home - just to save time"
/ We've all had those days. Just move the letter back to the
IN box and pick another one.
Keep in mind that it's supposed to be fun for you, too.
That said, welcome
D
|
Chris Perivolidis ... New to the
Crew 5/2/06 Hi Bob, good talking with you
over the weekend at IMAC. Sorry we missed you after the
banquet, but we couldn't resist going to see PufferPunk
tanks. Anyway, looking forward to helping out on
WetWeb. <Great!> A little about myself. I've
had tanks most of my life, with a break during college and a few
years after that. My Dad got me started as a kid, with a
small tank and a few Tiger Barbs. Plenty to keep me
fascinated though. I moved up to a 20 that I had for
many years with a now horrifying collection of incompatible fish
and shoddy maintenance, but live and learn. After going
tankless for quite a while I got the bug again and moved into
saltwater. After close to a year of research and waiting
I finally got my current tank, a 46G tank, home to my clowns and
Gramma, and a red serpent star (squiggy) that has passed through
several WetWebbers tanks before now calling mine
home. Plus several colonies of soft corals and mushrooms
that came along with the LR. I feel confident answering questions
on SW livestock, maintenance, and fish diseases. However
I'm not much of a coralphile so those I'll have to mostly
pass on. I'll also try to help out in the freshwater
area as much as possible but I'm a bit rusty on that
topic. I am also a relatively new diver and can't
wait for summer to get back in the water. Talk to you soon,
<Thank you for sharing. BobF> |
Chris UW in HI... Sab pic |
Leslie Leddo Hi Bob,
<Leslie> I am an avid fan/reader of your web site, books,
articles and of course photography. I recently saw a response in
FAQs about your need for some additional help answering questions.
I am not sure how long ago it was posted or if you are still
looking for volunteers but if you are I would love to help however
I can. <Ahh, "just in the nick of time" as the saying
goes... perhaps just enough margin to "get in a/the
groove" before a bunch of us are out to Germany and Egypt next
month> I have to say that my experience is short in terms of
length in the hobby compared to many of you but it has been filled
with many experiences some of which, at the time, I really would
have rather passed on but in retrospect I can see just how valuable
they all were and how much I have learned and grown. I have been
blessed to be guided by a few wonderful mentors who used to tell me
that the 1000's of questions I bombarded them with on a regular
basis would some day be paid forward, so to speak, giving back and
sharing what I have learned to help others. Did you by chance see
that amazing movie Pay It Forward? If not I highly recommend it!!
Keep the Kleenex box close by. I have learned so much from my many
mistakes & successes, from you, the crew here, and from all the
wonderful hobbyists who have allowed me to help them . I have been
moderating on the seahorse boards for almost 4 years. I currently
help to administrate www.syngnathid.org as well as moderate several
forums there. <Ahh, did not see this movie (yet) but will try to
on your recommendation. Am familiar with the concept and abide by
it> I started about 8 years ago or so with a fish bowl. Yup I
bought a fish bowl. I just had to have it. It was a drum shaped 1g
bowl that sat inside of a ceramic frame consisting of 3 adorable
little kittens laying around the bowl. I had a bowl so I had to get
a fish right? Funny thing is I used to have nightmares about fish
when I was a kid. I rescued a Betta from one of those little
plastic jars in the LFS. I progressed to fancy goldfish in a small
tank, then a bigger tank, a black ghost knifefish, a Reed fish and
on to Discus and Rams for a short while. One day perusing in the
LFS I stumbled upon captive bred seahorses from Ocean Rider.....I
fell in love, have been enamored ever since. Here I am 8 tears,
woops I mean years later. Yes there have been tears, plenty of them
but the pleasure and benefits far outweigh any sadness or
disappointments. My marine knowledge & experience is limited to
basic marine aquarium keeping, seahorses, specifically seahorse
disease and treatment, species identification, some breeding and
rearing, tankmates, more recently (the last 2 years) puffers and a
new Zebra Moray. I am also interested in Anglers but do not have
one yet. I had an amazing Midnight Dogface Puffer and have learned
quite a bit about these wonderful endearing creatures. I recently
lost my first Puffer, who was my all time favorite fish to a hunger
strike I could not persuade him to break. I cried like I had lost
one of my best friends. I still get tearful when I think about it.
I have some experience with dentistry ...Puffer dentistry, that is
:), as well as tube feeding seahorses when all else has failed. I
am passionate about these creatures I care for and would be honored
to share that passion with others. My experience is lacking in some
of the more technical aspects of aquarium keeping like chemistry,
lighting, reef keeping and inverts. I currently keep ONLY captive
bred seahorses but have had experience with wild caught seahorses
as well. I have kept both temperate and tropical tanks and almost
all if not all the species currently available. I also have a FOWLR
tank and have set up a new tank for a Warty Frogfish! Can't
wait to find one!!! <Am looking for anglers daily while diving
in HI> I have 2 wonderful Doberman pinchers.....Kali and Willie
they are 11 and 8 respectively and have had quite a bit of
experience training, specifically using operant
conditioning/clicker training as it is affectionately called. I
assisted a local animal behaviorist with his puppy and obedience
classes for several years. I toy with using some of these
techniques deliberately with my wet pets and actually had begun to
work with my puffer to try and get him to eat get him to eat
shelled seafood which he was not to fond of, as well as to diminish
his incessant begging behavior which always made me feel guilty for
not responding and indulging his every whim. I am a registered
nurse since I can remember.....27 or so years, working in Labor and
Delivery and High Risk Obstetrics, in the hospital setting. I take
care of pregnant women with any complication of pregnancy you can
imagine and then some :). I believe that my medical background has
been a great asset in caring for my animals and the reason I seem
to delve so deeply for answers. I have always been intrigued by the
how and why of things. <A full life for sure> I know my
limits and when I am in over my head. I have no trouble asking for
help. I post from my own experiences good and bad as well as
research my responses. I read what ever I can get my hands on. The
Conscience Marine Aquarist was my first and is my favorite marine
book. I love your warm light hearted writing style. It is fun and
at the same time informative and easy to read. I refer to it on a
regular basis. In fact I just had to purchase my second copy
because it was so well worn that the pages were falling out and
kept getting mixed up. Drove me nuts. <I don't even have a
copy!> I had an article published in FAMA called
Mycobacteriosis: An Infection You Could Acquire From Your Aquarium
. It is also posted in the Library of syngnathid.org http://www.syngnathid.org/ubbthreads/showarticles.php
along with an article on UV and tube feeding seahorses......if you
would like to have a look at my writing style there are also many
posts on the board. I have had the great honor and privilege of
working with Pete Giwojna on his soon to be released book on
seahorse husbandry. My love of photography and my wet pets has in
the last few years taken a new twist which I never in a million
years expected. I started receiving requests to use my photos on
the internet first then in FAMA's monthly column Horse Forum
and most recently they have been published by TFH in Alisa
Abbott's book The Complete Guide to Dwarf Seahorses in the
Aquarium as well as will be featured almost exclusively in
Pete's new book I mentioned above. My photos can be seen in the
following places if you would like to have a look: -The
Syngnathid.org Species Galleries http://www.syngnathid.org/ubbthreads/PP/index.php
, -The Syngnathid.org Member's Gallery http://www.syngnathid.org/ubbthreads/PP/index.php
, -syngnathid.org in the rotation of photos on the main page
http://www.syngnathid.org
-Bob Goemans site http://www.saltcorner.com -
http://www.oceanrider.com
-Reefcentral's Reef Keeping Online magazine http://www.reefkeeping.com/ has
accepted a series of my photos for use in their Reef Slides monthly
column. - http://www.oceana.org
and Gateway Learning Corporation also purchased one of my photos
for educational purposes <I wish you could have been out here
this go... we've been out with Carol and Craig (and Dylan and
Cooper their twin boys) of Ocean Rider a few times, and a dinner
party or two here... Carol was over to recover her salad bowl last
night... Am sure you would have enjoyed meeting, chatting with
them... perhaps next time> If you are interested and need
photographs of seahorses, puffers or any of their tankmates I would
be also be honored to share my photos on your web site or for any
of your various projects. I shoot both transparencies and digital.
<Ah, good> Let me know if the your crew could use another
volunteer - it would be a great honor and privilege to work with
you and your crew and share my experience with your readers. Thanks
so much for your generous commitment to the hobby and for your time
and help over the years. Sincerely, Leslie <Thank you for coming
forward. I am cc'ing your message here to the WWM Crew and
welcome you to join us. Would it be okay to post much of what is
here as your bio? Please feel free to "grab" what
questions you find in the "general" in-box, or return
ones that end up in your personal folder that you'd rather not
respond to... There are a few conventions that we try to adhere
to... placing a title on the responses, not responding to queries
in ALL CAP'S! What have you. Am sure others will
respond/welcome you here. Again, thank you for sharing. WWM is a
wonderful tool for informing and inspiring others... and a good
start at encouraging awareness, stewardship of our planet. I thank
you for being part of it with us. Bob F> |
Re: Volunteering Hi Bob!!! WOW!! I am
honored. I am so excited.....just thrilled to have you accept my
offer, to be part of such a wonderful group and have another
avenue to share my passion. Thank you so much. I am glad the
timing is right. <I as well. Please make it known what sorts
of categories of questions you prefer... other than
syngnathids> Germany and Egypt.....sounds like a lot of fun.
Please stay safe. <We will> I am so sorry I missed Carol
and Craig. Were they here in CA or were you in Hawaii? <Out
here on the Big Island. If you can make it I hope to have some of
the folks, particularly those that aren't coming out next
month, come on over for any part of the first two weeks of
July... we have a house here> I would have loved to have met
them and those boys!! Carol sent me a photo and they are just
adorable!! I have spoken to them once or twice on the phone and
have emailed back and forth quite a bit. Yes please feel free to
use whatever you would like from my email for my bio. <Will
do> I look forward to joining you all and participating in
this great journey. Thank you so much for a wonderful
opportunity!! <A pleasure to meet you. Bob F>
|
Mike Kaechele: I've been
working on WetWebMedia with Bob F. from nearly the start, when it
was only a couple of dozen pages in size. I have enjoyed
every minute of it and I'm actually starting to learn more
about the pet-fish business. I'm looking forward to traveling,
scuba diving, and taking some underwater pictures with everyone on
this page. |
|
Michelle Lemech About Mich... Ive
always loved the water and most of the critters in it. I spent
most of my time outside while growing up in the Pocono Mountains
of Pennsylvania. My favorite pastime was catching frogs, toads,
tadpoles, salamanders and the like and building homes for them in
the backyard. My love of nature and interest in science lead me
to Muhlenberg College where I earned an undergraduate degree in
Biology. I worked in a biochemistry lab doing immunoassays for
several years before heading back to grad school. I received a
masters in Genetic Counseling from Arcadia University and then
needed to return to the Poconos. With limited job opportunities
due to geography, I went back to school again, this time for
nursing. I am a licensed RN. While collecting degrees I was
introduced by a friend to the saltwater aquarium hobby and fell
in love. I am currently active in several clubs and take pleasure
in the educational, social, and collaborative aspects. I enjoy
helping others and hope to contribute to and be a positive
influence at WWM.
|
|
WWM Mac, Lewis attack/joining
Mac Lewis here. I just got back from IMAC and wanted to drop you
guys a note. I wanted to thank you Bob, Anthony and Scott, for the
discussions on breeding the dwarf angelfish. This is something I am
very interested in after two years of research and if you could put
me in touch with the right people I would definitely appreciate it.
As you know, I was up there to teach people how to frag corals. I
think it went very successfully and worked out quite well with
several newbies learning how to frag some new corals. <Great>
Bob, you suggested that I come on board to volunteer so tell me how
I can help you? <Mmm, a few ways. Help answer queries if you
have the time, notion... write (for pay) articles/content for our
new on-line zine...> I am honored that you guys think I might be
of some assistance to you on WetWebMedia. Let me tell you a little
more about myself. I've had fish tanks since I was ten years
old. I began with the standard freshwater tank. But, I fell in love
with fish. In the early 1980's, a friend convinced me to try a
saltwater tank and I've been hooked ever since. During that
time I supplemented my income by breeding some Africans and
Cory's, angels, discus and Uaru's. I worked in a very
successful pet store in Lexington Kentucky where I moved up in the
ranks to order the fish and work with the birds. Lansdowne Pets was
one of the first pet stores to bring in live rock. I will NEVER
forget the smell of that 120 gallon curing 200 lbs of Caribbean
live rock. Or the sight of my first wet/dry filter. I've
continued with my love of saltwater creatures, but have expanded
what I do with them a bit. We make custom acrylic tanks on a very
limited basis and of course my tank is one of them. I'm
currently running a 120 gallon tank with an 18 gallon refugium up
above it that feeds into the tank. There's a 30 gallon wet/dry
sump located beneath the tank. I find the refugium balances the
nitrates. I also have a percula breeding tank that's a 40
square and am setting up a 180 fish only tank because I miss my
fish AND the ones in my reef have to be moved. I've kept a wide
diversity of fish over the years, from hatching sharks to keeping
seahorses. I have a bachelors degree in English and Government from
Centre College of Kentucky. Once again, just let me know how I can
be of help to you guys. Mac Lewis <What say you Mac...? Bob
Fenner> Mac's in... Yay! Count me in. Sounds like
fun. Oh and I have a picture of you from IMAC if you are interested
in it? <... a tough one. Okay. Will be posting your note as your
bio. on WWM unless you have other you'd prefer... Do you have a
state-able preference for topics, categories of queries you'd
like to field? Please state if so... We have a few conventions
which you'll soon learn re responding format... and Thank You
for your help, participation. Bob F> |
Mac, we'd like
to get to know you! |
Gwen Loiselle Hello folks,
thanks for the welcome! My experience is mostly in freshwater. I am
a typical hobbyist and have been keeping freshwater for over 8
years now. Since I work in retail I have basic knowledge of many
fish species, and have hands-on experience with everything from
guppies to Asian Arowanas. I also have a couple years of saltwater
experience but have only begun keeping marine tanks at home, since
about a year ago. At work I have short-term experience with many
different species of fish and corals, etc. My strengths lie in
troubleshooting, helping people deal with water parameters,
cycling, filtration, and controlling algae problems. I specialize
in keeping catfish, oddballs, and preds. I am currently a member of
Toms Place, (the site that hosts the FAAS) where I moderate the
Catfish forum. I have been a member of the Montreal Aquarium
Society for 4 years, and am the secretary and FAAS <Federation
of American Aquarium Societies, a club of clubs> chairperson,
also I co-chair the auction. I also created a simple website for
them and I maintain it. I am honored to be in the company of such
experts :) and am happy to help out. Thanks to you all for the nice
welcome. Gwen |
|
Oliver Lucanus - Potential New
Crew Member Dear Bob, <Chuck> Hope you are well and not
working too hard. Actually, I am writing for three reasons. One is
to let you know that I will be out of town this weekend speaking at
the Cichlid Classic in Chicago and will not be back until late Mon.
night so I will be unavailable for questions. <Hotay>
Secondly, I may be working out of town for the next month or so and
this will limit my time on WWM to weekends. <What's your
bosses name, number...?> I will keep you updated. Third is the
possibility for a new recruit to the crew. A couple of weeks ago I
had one of our speakers stay at my house and I was explaining to
him what we do at WWM. He very much liked the concept of what we do
and offered his help if needed. His name is Oliver Lucanus from
Montreal, Canada. <Oh, yes! I know of Oliver> He has traveled
all over the world and is an expert on South American and West
African FW fishes. You can check him out on his website at
Belowwater.com. He does travel quite a bit but I feel that he does
have something to offer when he does have time to answer questions.
Let me know what you think. Tell Pete that Carol and I say Hello.
Chuck <It would be great if he can spare the time. Please do
send my message along and let's sign him up! BobF>
Greetings to Oliver, Newest WWM Member Chuck says I should
write to you directly, <Yes, please. Either here or
[email protected]> I had told him that I could answer
some questions if you want. Would love to get a link to your site.
<Will gladly place this link (think it is already on the FW
links page, and even a freebie "ad" on the FW subweb in
grateful exchange for your assistance here. We have a few simple
conventions in responding that am sure you will recognize,
adapt/adopt... Your inbox: Oliver... but you will find that most
all freshwater queries are placed in the FRESHWATER inbox (or can
be sieved from the general in-box... Please feel free to respond to
any, all... Do send along a brief bio. for posting re our
"Crew" page and pic if you'd like... and do make it
known where I can get a banner to post on the FW subweb for your
business. Thank you for sharing, Bob F> Best Regards, Oliver
Lucanus Below Water http://www.belowwater.com
<<Oliver, Welcome to this craziness! I've briefly perused
your site, and am very impressed. No time at the moment to give you
the "custom" welcome, outlining P&P, etc., but
Bob's got one or two of my most recent rundowns somewhere on
site (apologies, Bob, I didn't bookmark 'em). Quick
question - is the Geophagus jurupari no longer a member of this
genus? I see it noted by Chuck as Satanoperca jurupari, no notation
in the summary on fishbase. Thanks, welcome, stay COOL everyone
(summer seems to finally be here!), and keep on truckin' Marina
>> Hi Marina, Yes, it is Satanoperca now (along with the
artists formerly known as Geophagus daemon, leucosticta, lilith and
acuticeps), basically all the pointed snout fish are now
Satanoperca. Most of the fish known as S. jurupari in the trade and
in our books are actually S. leucosticta (the real nice ones with
the fully spotted gill plate) - the real jurupari is a less
exciting fish. Best Wishes, O. PS: Summer here in Canada has been
cancelled. It is still cold, rainy and ugly. |
Oliver videoing UW in Brazil
O. Lucanus born near Munich, Germany has been
keeping fish for over 30 years. He has been wholesaling fish from
all over the world for 15 years and has traveled to many
countries to see the places our aquarium fish come from. His
specialty are freshwater fish from South America, Asia and
Africa.
|
Mike Maddox Bio. for WWM Crew posting -
1/31/08 I'm a premed Junior at Texas A&M Galveston,
majoring in Marine Biology. I've been keeping some form of
aquatic life on and off (mostly on, with a recent sabbatical
I've recently returned from) since I was six years old (that
would be eighteen years now...I'm old) and marine life for
over fourteen years. I'm intimately familiar with the needs
of virtually every ornamental aquatic fish (and have had almost
all of the marine ones at one point or another) as well as most
common reef invertebrates (Cnidarians, crustaceans, molluscs),
and how to provide proper care/feeding/water chemistry for said
animals. I currently have only one aquarium (I'm a student
with a negative cash flow living in an apartment with the kitchen
built into a closet!). My tank houses a Starry Puffer and a
Commerson's angler, which I spend time watching when I should
be studying. I will gladly help anyone with any question they may
have about aquatic life, be it a frog, fish, turtle, or otherwise
(I've kept more random aquatic animals than I care to name),
but I feel I'm most knowledgeable about marine life, and most
lacking in the freshwater fish area. I'm always willing to
help someone long term with a known
difficult/"impossible" to keep species, as I've
done a lot of research regarding these types of animals, though
not necessarily tried to keep many of them. I do feel that this
is how we progress in the hobby, and if someone is taking a
responsible, informed approach in doing their best to keep a
particular species that's known not to fair well in
captivity, and is trying to learn for the sake of the hobby, I
will do what I can. I don't recommend this for the average
aquarist, though!
And Updated Update! 3/09
Well, I'll take you up on the offer, then. :) I
made myself a folder, and here's an updated bio: <Ah,
good. Glad to be able to share your input, facts and learn from
your writing style... Now, my next question is... when are you
joining, or better, supplanting me on the petfish conf./hobby
presentation circuits? BobF> ----------------- My name is Mike
Maddox, and Ive wanted to be a marine biologist since I was six
years old, and kept marine aquariums since I was ten. A lot of
what Ive learned has been through trial and error, and it was
always a source of frustration to me that there wasnt more
information about actually keeping marine animals alive in
captivity when I was learning about the hobby. I have never
forgotten that frustration, and have endeavored to help hobbyists
not repeat the mistakes Ive made (and Ive made a lot this hobby
can be very trying at times) ever since. As far as my hobby
experience goes, I tend to only count my marine aquatics
experience, because I still dont know anything about freshwater,
except for the fact that you dont have to check the salinity! Ive
been keeping marine aquariums for fifteen years, and writing
about it (mostly on WWM) for five. Ive kept waaay too many
species to name them all individually, but my favorites are
pufferfish, carpet anemones, and T. maxima clams. I love really
big aquariums (for cool things like stability, big puffers,
sharks, eels, and giant anemones) and really small nano aquariums
(like my 8 gallon BioCube) because I like the effect of having a
compact reef. I currently have a 175 gallon FOWL setup with a DSB
and 60 gallon sump/wet-dry filter housing a map puffer, and a
zebra moray, and then theres the aforementioned (stock bio cube
8) nano reef, which is filled to the brim with various corals,
clams, anemones, and anything else that catches my eye or that
people want me to save for them (stock as I say, not as I do!).
Im a senior at Texas A&M University majoring in marine
biology/pre-med. My former life so to speak was almost a decade
in the IT field, and when I left the field completely to go back
to school, I left as a systems and networks administrator. To
keep up my "expert" appearance, a quick 'bragging
rights' paragraph: Ive been published in Tropical Fish
Hobbyist, Advanced Aquarist, The Conscientious Aquarist, and
Aquarium Explorer, moderate here at the WWM BB, run a blog at
Microcosm Aquarium Explorer website, and freelance for various
other aquatic and non-aquatic sites/publications. I am also
published in the American Journal of Rheumatology, for my medical
research on systemic lupus. ----------------
Thanks Bob,
Mike
|
|
Paul Mansur/WWM It has been
my life's ambition to work within the Reef domain since I was
young. As always dreams are put on hold to make a mark in the
world. Only recently have I made the effort into delving into this
beautiful, complex, life sustaining endeavor. I am currently a
student here in the Bay Area enrolled in Marine
Biology/Oceanography courses and plan on pursuing this as my major.
I have been dive certified for a few years now, and I am in process
of finishing my dive mastership by June this year 2003. I have been
lagging in this area due to time constraints. Between
course/curriculum diving and recreational diving I can usually get
in roughly 50 dives a year. I have done a great deal of diving from
Monterey to Palau and various areas between. I have a few very good
friends in Palau and have spent over 20 days there, and I have been
lucky enough to go on some amazing dives. Some of my dives were to
help out their local ecology through the Palau Conservation
Society's crown-of-thorn cleanups, which in turn eased the
vulnerability of these suffering reefs due to the '97 El Nino
occurrence. Lastly, I am in process of volunteering in the Coral
Husbandry department at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. I will start in
April in what I hope to be a first step in possibly switching
careers. I have been keeping fresh water 80 and 100 gallon African
Cichlid Aulonocara "peacock" tanks for well over seven
years. I have various male and female pairs of mostly Aulonocara
raised from the fry stage. I have also created various defined
breeding profiles for the Iodotropheous sprengerae
"Rusty" and Sciaenochromis fryeri "Electric
Blue". In addition, I have successfully been able to trigger
captive egg release of Gold Marble Angel fish (Pterophyllum
scalare) in a 30 gallon Amazon planted tank. (No male to mate with
though) Only recently, I moved into the reef realm of aquarium
keeping. I have 3 tanks, all on the smaller scale of reefscaping:
10 gallon shallow biotope, a 20 gallon mixed coral (mostly soft),
and a 30 gallon that is in the process of becoming a lagoonal
biotope of the Indo Pacific. I am most proud to state that all
coral in the 20 gallon are captive farmed animals. I am in the
process of doing research for the right captive bred and tank
raised fish for each aquarium (if any at all). A 30 gallon captive
bred seahorse tank is in the works as well with more aquariums to
come, of course. I am also working with a leading live marine foods
breeder on experimentation of food sizes/stuffs for varying harder
to keep corals and fish. We are searching for some growth patterns
and possible breeding success to document for future products as
well as a longer captive success of these animals. Although I am a
Marine Biology major, I still know what side my bread is buttered.
I make my living (sellin' my time) as a computer associate for
Hitachi Data Systems. HDS is a fantastic company with a bright
future and a real pleasure to work for with cool technology to
boot. I have been in the computer industry since 96 and mostly
self-taught. Better than digging ditches! (at a - cost per hard
physical labor - point of view anyway, nothing against you ditch
diggers, tho'). I look forward to the challenge before me as
the many hobbyists will force me to learn on things I ordinarily
would not have any inclination to learn about. I am appreciative of
the chance to work with such esteemed and knowledgeable volunteers
as are here at Wetwebmedia. They have all been very helpful to me
in the past, and it is the least I can do to help out an industry
that has been so forthcoming to me. I am especially grateful for
the chance to work with Bob Fenner and Anthony Calfo who are giants
among men in this industry. Thank you for the chance to serve the
great hobbyists of Wetwebmedia |
PAUL! How long has it been now? Sheesh.
|
Sara Allyn Mavinkurve/Liva joins
the WWM Crew 06/28/07 SaraM Bio and pic 06/28/07 Ok,
I'm not so good at this... but here's what I came up with
for a "bio." I'm attaching a picture too (it's
not the best pic, but I don't have too many other recent ones).
------------------- I was born in 1981 in Akron, OH and currently
live in Cleveland, OH. I've loved aquatic creatures and kept
aquariums of some sort or another since I was quite little. My mom
tells me that when I was 4 I was quite frustrated with the fact
that I would never be a fish or be able to live in the sea. I'm
still a bit disappointed about that, but find some solace in my
aquariums. My broad and seemingly endless curiosity about the world
in general has left me with a rather eclectic list of academic
achievements and experiences. Though I majored in math and minored
in computer science in college, I also took many biology and
chemistry classes as a premed student. I spent almost a year in
medical school before deciding that it wasn't for me. At some
point while in medical school, I started my first marine aquarium
which became the second love of my life. At some point I earned a
MA in Bioethics and am now in law school at Case Western Reserve
University. My main interest now is in reef aquariums, corals and
other marine invertebrates. The courses I took in biology and
chemistry, biochemistry, etc. along with my experience in medical
research is what has enabled me to be able to read and understand
just about any science or research journal. I also understand
research and study design and hope to use this ability to make more
academic information accessible to the reef keeping hobby. I've
created ASIRA.org with the hope
of making more information more accessible to store employees and
owner (and hobbyists too). I'm happy now to be able to help WWM
do the same.As for WWM, just tell me what you'd like me to
contribute. I have plenty of time to answer queries. I know you
don't like to take work for free, but please, you already
bought me dinner, remember? ;-) Sara <I do welcome you to our
Crew Sara. Bob Fenner> <<Updating my bio here: I graduated
from law school in August, 2008... still looking for work! -Sara M.
(who is also responsible for the recent re-facing/re-designing of
WWM, including all the new logos! -with ScottV's
help)>> |
|
Cody May I live in Kalispell,
Montana and I am 14 years old. I was 7 when I got my first tank
(saltwater). I now have a 75 gal. FOWLR, 80 gal. reef and a 240 in
the planning stages. My specialties (or things I sometimes know
what I'm talking about) are marine fish, soft and LPS corals. I
currently work at the only Aquarium shop in town and have been
working there for a little over a year. I discovered WWM about 1
year ago and don't think I've left the computer since. Let
me know if I can be any help, Cody May. |
Cody,
Cody. Where for art thou, Cody? |
WetWebMedia
4/29/12
Dear Bob,
<Felicia>
Hope you made it to Virginia ok! Thanks for the fun weekend and
presentation. It was awesome getting to talk with you about your
knowledge of the industry (and other things).
<Ah, a very nice time indeed. Thank you for having me out>
Whenever you're not busy, I'm ready to help out on Wet Web Media. I used
to answer emails for Liveaquaria.com Tech Support, and I loved it. Just
let me know what I need to do :)<I/we thank you for consenting to help,
joining the WWM Crew. The log in to our webmail server:
the "email address" :
Password:
Your in-folder: Felicia
Some notes on conventions we've found to be useful in responding:
If you would, please send along a brief bio. (and pic if you'd like) for
posting to the WWM Crew pages... so folks can/will associate you w/ a
bit
of info./identity.
Welcome to our association. BobF
--
Sincerely,
Felicia McCaulley
NCPARS VP of Public Affairs
Seahorse Breeder, Aquarium Photographer, Blogger, Aquatic Life
Identifier
ReefTools DFS Pet Blog Aquarium Adventures Felicia
McCaulley Photography
Welcome Felicia McCaulley to WWM Crew!
4/30/12
Thanks for the warm welcome, guys! I'm excited to get started.
Bio: Felicia has worked in the pet industry since 2002 and has worked in
retail, wholesale, and aquaculture. She worked for Liveaquaria.com as a
call center agent, tech support, and Diver's Den photographer and marine
life identifier. She lives in Philadelphia with reef, seahorse/oddball
fish, shore crab, and livebearer aquariums; 3 parrots; 20+ hamsters; and
a leopard gecko. She enjoys photography, solving fish
health/disease/nutrition issues, breeding seahorses and other marine
fish, propagating corals, writing magazine articles, and blogging.
Felicia currently works for Allquatics in Hamilton, New Jersey.
Ahh, will post! BobF |
|
Jim McDavid Hello Bob,
thank you for your invitation, and I look forward to helping out.
Here is my long winded brief bio as per your request. :) I tend to
be brevity challenged, so I'll do my best for you. :) I was
born in 1970, and I've been obsessed with everything fish since
I was 3 years old. I started out back then (and remain to this day)
an avid Bass fisherman. That's where it all started I suppose.
I've been keeping marine and freshwater tanks for around 20
years now. It started back in high school with my aunt giving me
her used 55 gallon tank. I stocked the tank with a few Oscars and
other odds and ends, and read and devoured everything I could get
my hands on about fish. Articles and books by Martin Moe and
Herbert Axelrod filled my book shelf. Soon the 55 became a 135
gallon marine tank, which became a 180. I cycled through keeping
marine fish, and breeding various species of Central American,
South American and African cichlids during the following years.
Some years later I was fortunate for a time to have an indirect
link to Stuart Grant, so I was able to obtain some of the rarer
wild African cichlid species right from the lakes themselves. When
I was in junior college I got a job at a large fish store which had
upwards of 200 tanks. I had the responsibility of maintaining,
medicating and stocking these tanks. While working there I became
even more intimately familiar with hundreds marine species. With
access to so many species, I think I kept almost everything at one
time or another during that period. Being able to observe so many
fish, many for an extended period of time gave me invaluable
perspective as to their relative hardiness in comparison to each
other. Some of this I had to relearn in following years since
collection methods back then skewed my perspective on certain
species. I found out some were much hardier than my early
experiences seemed to indicate due to rampant cyanide use back
then. I've been very pleasantly surprised in that regard with
many species. In the years since, although I've kept up my
interest in both freshwater and marine aquaria, my main interest
nowadays is marine tanks for the most part, for space reasons if
nothing else. Just no room for everything I want to keep! I've
been a board member of the Pacific Coast Cichlid Association in the
past, although it's been about 2 years now since I've kept
a freshwater tank of any type. Although I currently maintain reef
tanks, and I've been successful at raising corals and Tridacnid
clams, I remain a dyed in the wool fish geek. I'd say my areas
of specialty in the marine fish realm (aside from general setup,
maintenance, stocking, etc) would be groupers, triggers and
angelfish. Aside from that I can answer in detail questions on
other species, with the exception of gobies and blennies. I really
never developed an interest in those fish, so they represent a hole
in my knowledge for the most part. I currently maintain an in-wall
150 gallon reef which aside from assorted corals and clams,
includes an imperator angel, a pair of maroon clowns and a snooty
Maori wrasse! My next project will be a dedicated 120 gallon
undulatus tank. Please let me know if you require further
information. Cheers, Jim |
Oh Jim! We're
still waiting for that photo! |
Josh McMillen Bob... Josh
"the edit guy" again, one fish, two squish 9/22/05
Bob, Time does fly by, and I apologize for my late response here.
My wife and I are actually purchasing our first home and I'm
sure you can appreciate the paperwork/run around there (hopefully
we close tomorrow!). <Congrats!> I do, however, have some bad
news. Apparently I'm not eighteen anymore! This one caught me
off guard this morning (after about fifteen drinks, four hours
sleep, and my usual 5:30 alarm for work). Engagement parties due
have their place I suppose, but at least I now know mine.
Twenty-five is old enough to stop gallivanting around like an
idiot. Now to the answer. Time and interest I've got in spades!
To consider my self proficient in anything always seems to bring
about a laziness I would rather avoid. My areas of most comfort
(and least second guessing) would have to be basic water chemistry,
husbandry, and compatibility (tank size/mates, etc.) of marine
tanks. I feel quite comfortable on the basic ID questions (worms,
sponges and the like) of which I know you get many. I'm not yet
comfortable on anymore than basic coral ID because I've
resisted buying them for probably too long now. I only like to move
forward in definite steps without sudden "What do I do
now!?" situations. Mushrooms and zoanthids are all that
I've taken in. If any of this seems useful, then it is yours.
If you would like a more seasoned vet, then you will hear from me
yet! (Not meant threateningly of course:) Josh P.S. I didn't
mean to sound like Dr. Seuss either! <Mmm, I hear a Who... and
would like it very much, much more than I can touch, if you'd
join us... in responding to what you feel comfortable with, have
time for... What say you Ted (Geisel), I mean Josh? BobF> |
New WWM Crew member
"Joshua McMillen" 9/23/05 Welcome, Joshua! Glad to have you with us! We actually just
welcomed a couple folks last week, so I'm kinda
cutting/pasting what I gave them regarding "how it
works", so please feel free to ask any questions. Basic
conventions to follow: Anything in the inbox, fresh, marine,
brackish, and pond folders that has not been answered is up for
grabs. Move any questions you wish to answer into your folder
before answering them; this helps to prevent sending multiple
replies on one question. When you reply, try to follow the same
"style" that we use <Your replies in carrots>
Mmmm, carrots.... <Tasty carrots!> And remove blank spaces
and such. Also, it might be worthwhile to copy/paste into
Microsoft Word so you can use spell-check. Once you've sent
the reply, it should automatically save a copy in the
"Sent" folder. You can then delete the original message
(don't delete the reply that was saved in the Sent folder; we
need that). Feel free to take any questions that you feel
comfortable with. Take a look at our Daily FAQs and other related
sections to kinda "get a feel" for it all (links below)
and feel free to ask any questions. Thank you for your assistance
with WWM! -Sabrina http://www.wetwebmedia.com/daily_faqs.htm http://www.wetwebmedia.com/faqsonfaqs.htm http://www.wetwebmedia.com/faqstips.htm http://www.wetwebmedia.com /QueryCorrsRefPg.htm <Thank you Sabrina... am saving
your input for future others... BobF> Bob, I hope your
holiday was as fun as mine! My family has left town now and
I'm finally getting back to the normal routine, so I thought
I'd finally send some pics. along. My wife snapped a few of
me and I'm adding some others from my tank. Didn't know
which picture of me was best as I never like my photos (weird
phobia of them since I was about 9), so I just sent them all.
Now, if I can just write that bio..... - Josh <Do so, please.
Will post. BobF>
|
Justin
Miedwig Born in Elgin, IL, one of the farthest possible
places from an ocean, I somehow found my way to the saltwater
addiction that we have all come to know and love. Having been in
the hobby for over thirteen years, I have kept just about every
type of reef setup possible. I have always been one to experiment
with unusual DIY projects and non-traditional reef keeping methods
hence earning the nickname Dr. J: The Mad Scientist.
I graduated from Judson College in 2002 with a
degree in Media Studies and went on to pursue my second love film.
I moved to LA and worked on feature films, television series,
pilots, music videos you name it. I recently ventured into
underwater videography and was very fortunate to shoot some footage
for Walt and Deb Smith out in Fiji. I love the fact that I am able
to combine these two worlds to not only keep these amazing
creatures, but to also capture them in their natural
environment. Today, I keep mostly SPS
coral and consider them to be my expertise. I am very honored to be
able to answer questions for WWM, and I thank Bob and Jeni for the
opportunity. |
|
Travis Mestad... Where did I
go??? 11/17/05 Hey Bob, <Travis... there you are!> I was
gone for awhile due to Chiropractic Board Exams <<Wishing
you were also an acupuncturist, I am in great need!
Marina>> and the beginning of a new trimester here at
college. I was also enjoying time with my 8 month old daughter. I
had stopped in a few times to check my mailbox and make sure things
were being kept up with. Granted I did not have many responses
lately, maybe 3-5, but I planned on getting back into the swing of
things once life leveled back out. Well it has now level again and
I am back, yet I am not... Not on the site that is. Please let me
know if this was an innocent mistake or if I have offended someone
in some way as I would like to continue to contribute. Thank you,
TravisM <Thanks for the notice, help. Reinstated. Cheers,
BobF> |
|
Alex Miller Welcome Alex to
the WWM Crew! Thanks Bob! Here's a bio and a couple of
pictures. Seems I don't have many pictures, apparently I am the
one taking all the pictures! (the snorkeling is at Molokini)I live
in Birmingham, AL, with my husband Michael and 16 year old daughter
Katie, and our mini zoo. I'm a mechanical engineer, working in
generation planning at an electric utility. I also am a licensed
massage therapist, which makes for a pretty unusual combination. We
cycle for excercise and fun, ride motorcycles, and ski or SCUBA
when we get a chance.We have a house full of animals: 2 cats, 2
dogs, fish of course, a parrot, and 4 reptiles.I grew up with
fresh-water fish, and have usually had at least one tank of some
variety. A decade ago I was bitten by the salt-water bug, and very
much enjoyed learning and experiencing my first FOWLER tank. It has
up-sized and evolved into a reef over the last few years. I have
mainly learned by reading bokks and on-line, experience, and
talking to any who can teach me something. As my library spans a
wide range of time and methods, I have seen the evolution in the
best-practices and have tried to keep up. I had a short stint
cleaning tanks as a part-time helper at an LFS, and have seen local
businesses come and go. I appreciate their challenges, and the
challenges of hobbyists who get varying advice from their LFS. I
like to keep it simple, and do appreciate your emphasis on natural
sustainable approaches.I am a life-long aquarist, captured by the
challenge, the beauty, and the serenity (in-between crises) offered
by our own little piece of the reef. Alex Miller |
|
Will Neinast, bio. 7/8/09
Bob (Mr. Fenner?),
Unfortunately, I have not contributed to a forum to date,
although I would be very interested in joining one. I have heard
many positive remarks about both AquariaCentral and Aquatic Plant
Central; do you have any comments on either? I do apologize for
not having an available sample of my work, which has mostly
consisted of informal research data and personal
experimentation.
As for a bio, here is my best attempt:
Will Neinast's (even I don't know how to pronounce it)
interest in aquatic life begin at the age of 8 upon the
successful landing of a 3-foot channel catfish. While not a
recommended "starter" fish, it did inhabit a large
Styrofoam container for a few miserable hours. Too bad zebra
Danios aren't native! Since then, I've kept at least 1
aquarium in the house at all times.
During a 5 year stint in Portland, Oregon, I learned the art of
fly fishing, as well as the even more difficult art of counting
salmon swimming over the Bonneville Dam (1 salmon, 2 salmon...
EERGGH!). After moving back to my hometown of Charlotte, North
Carolina, I began to expand my horizons into planted and brackish
tanks. Several thousand hours of research and experimentation
later, I finally began to understand the intricacies and
"interconnectedness" of my various microsystems. I
currently keep a relatively mundane collection of tanks: a 10
gallon paludarium for two firebellied toads, a 20 gallon
"Southeast Asian" biotope, a 55 gallon mixed Central
American cichlid and livebearer planted tank, and a soon-to-be
set up 75 gallon planted tank. I've never been truly content
with simply observing my aquatic charges; instead fiddling with
various parameters and equipment designed to provide the ideal
environment. Most of my tanks have now been shifted from
"DIY" tanks with experimental filters, lighting,
substrate, etc., to more conventional set-ups. This however,
granted me invaluable experience from which to draw on in future
systems.
Whoops, accidentally hit Send before I finished this! My
apologies, and the remainder is below.
I can confidently answer questions on snail control, DIY plumbing
and filtering, most Central American cichlids, economical and
simple plant fertilization, school-aggressive behavior of
"fin-nippers", amphibians and paludariums, creative
aquascaping, lighting, alternative planted-tank substrates, and
innovative use of hardware/ garden store and various other
everyday supplies in aquaria.
My other interests include golfing, soccer, guitar, rock
climbing, kayaking, and keeping up with the family horses.
Although I am only a high-school junior, I will strive to provide
the utmost level of advice possible.
Thanks,
Will N.
<Oh! Are you a "regular" on a bb that we might
peruse? What areas of expertise do you consider your strongest
Will? BobF>
<Yep, up to about 300 posts right now. I'm primarily a
DIY/ planted tank guy, but I dabble in saltwater. In fact,
I'm sure Lynn would be happy to send you a copy of my recent
nano-reef article. Looking back,
I didn't include as much information as I would've liked,
but apparently it was meaty enough to be included in an upcoming
newsletter.>
<Ah, outstanding. Lynn, Neale, will you please look over
Will's posts, give me the benefit of your impressions... Am
hopeful Mr. Neinast is ready to help us out on WWM proper.
BobF>
Sounds good to me. Welcome aboard!
Cheers, Neale
|
|
Andrew Nixon joins the WetWebMedia Crew
1/6/2008 Dear Mr. Fenner, I am writing to you, via a
suggestion by a member who actively posts on a website I moderate
on called aquariacentral.com , and that member is a part of your
crew ( Jeni - aka PufferPunk ). <Ah, yes> By way of a
little introduction about myself. My name is Andrew, 34 years old
and I live in U.K, England. I am Head IT Manager by trade for an
estate agency group, have a daughter who is aged 6..I have been
fishkeeping for about 7 - 8 years, started of will a good few
freshwater species tanks, was never really that much into the
planted side of things. The tanks ranged from 10 gallons, up to
90..About 3 years ago, I decided that after a good few years of
researching, learning and understanding marine fish, corals,
inverts I branched out and start keeping marine. These tanks
ranged from 46 gallons upwards in varying sizes, could not get
enough of et.al tanks have always been very successful and I put
that down to the few years of knowledge building I did while I
was keeping freshwater. Since then, I moved over to the side of
passing on my knowledge and helping others by joining
Aquariacentral.com and head the marine forums there ( my member
name there is Reefscape ).. I spent the vast majority of my time
there now, helping and supporting the existing aquarist's and
new starters alike, and would like to branch out and help other
sources too. I enjoy this with a passion, I feel at home
discussing, debating, advising people on now to solve an issue
with their tanks, advise on how to go about setting up marine
systems, advise on stocking compatibility issues etc etc..corals
/ invert and their feeding, lighting and behaviour...Equipment
choices, recommendations, why some work better than others, and
the things for people to avoid. So, all I wanted to do was put an
offer to you, that if you ever feel that you have room for a
junior member on your team to help out on all round issues of the
marine aquaria side of the site, then I glad offer my services
and knowledge over to you, would certainly be an honour and a
privilege. With kind regards Andrew Nixon <We do have a need
for a person of your apparent background, interest... I do
hope/trust that helping as part of WWM will not interfere with
time better spent with your family, work, other endeavours. Do
send along a likeness and other Bio. mat. if you'd like this
posted, and thank you for coming forward, offering to help
others. I welcome you to our association. Bob Fenner>
|
|
Justin Norman bio. 11/19/06 > Hi Bob,
> I hope the evening finds you well -- certainly a good chance
in the tropics. > <Yes, thank you my friend> > You
are certainly envied by my wife and I. > <Mmm, please join
me> <<Alas, as much as we would love to, we are a tad
strapped for cash, as our official day of blessed union is next
May, and as I had said in prior correspondence, I'm disabled
and still in therapeutic/vocational recovery at the moment... The
offer is definitely appreciated, though. If it were feasible, we
would have been there a week ago ;)>> <Perhaps another
time> > Also, I was curious if your previous offer to
assist the crew in daily responses still stands. I think I'd
like to try my hand at it, if you still feel my knowledge
adequate. > Thanks, > Justin > <If you believe, you
want to try, please be welcome to our association... > Please
write back with a brief bio. to post, and I'll send along the
log-in info. BobF> > <<Here's the quick little
bio I had knocked out for the CA guys after I finished my article
with attached picture, I think it pretty well covers the bases.
-Justin>> I'm 24 years old, and have been a computer
and tech geek for the majority of my life, stemming from my
father's own love of such. About 2 years ago, I broke my back
at the first lumbar vertebrae, and suffered some spinal bruising,
leading to partial paralysis from the waist down. I'm
currently in year 2 of outpatient therapy to regain everything
that I can, and have the ability to walk short distances in a
walker, but am tied to a wheelchair most of the time. With the
newfound time on my hands, I've spent the better part of the
last year reading and educating myself in this great hobby,
starting with a pair of Bettas that was purchased for us by a
friend, but leading very quickly into advanced reefkeeping.
Currently, my wife and I are keeping 4 tanks, 2 small freshwater
tanks, and 2 medium-sized saltwater tanks, but we've always
got our eyes on the next big one. <Ahh! Please do join our
association of helping pet-fish friends. The log-in for our
webmail: XXXX email addr. there: XXXX password: XXXX You can be
JustinN or whatever designation you'd like to be known by...
We have a loose set of conventions, which am sure you will adjust
to in a short while. Welcome to our Crew. Bob Fenner>
Greetings and Salutations! JustinN returns to WWM
10/5/09
Hey Bob!
<Justin>
I know, I know -- its been a long time. For starters, I want to
thank you for the letter of recommendation that you so graciously
provided me. It helped me win my job with Rackspace (a hosting
company here in San Antonio), and was cited by my managers
several times as one of the main reasons they brought me on.
Unfortunately, I've been so busy shifting through 3 separate
promotions for the last nearly 2 years, that I haven't been
able to really keep up -- as I'm sure you noticed :)
<Heeee! Congratulations>
Essentially, I wanted to drop you a line and let you know, that
I've finally hit a job position that doesn't consume 100%
of my time, and I will be in for a long time to come. Things are
stabilizing around here, and after dozens of email threads at
work where people have asked for advice and I became the go-to
guy, I had my desire rekindled. My new job role doesn't
involve direct customer interaction, and only 2 months into it
I'm already missing it. If you're still willing to have
me, I'd like to offer up my toes for dipping in the WWM
waters again :)
<Please do log back on and make an in-folder. Do you still
have the log-in, password?>
Again, thanks for everything -- I'm not sure you realize
quite how much weight your praise carried.
-Justin Norman
<Am very glad to have assisted your worthy efforts.
BobF>
|
Re: Justin Norman, WWM Crew 11/23/06
Justin, just a note to say thank you for your participation...
You have the knowledge, passion, capacity to engage folks... and
I am grateful for your participation, and learning from your
sharing. BobF. <Wow... Don't know what to say but thanks,
Bob. I consider you to be a bit of a personal hero, per se,
especially in handling of writing style. That means a lot, coming
from you. Thanks again. -JustinN>
|
Chuck Rambo's Bio Chuck
has been keeping freshwater fish for over 36 years. He currently
maintains 40 freshwater aquariums with cichlids from all over the
world. He is a "Fellow" of the American Cichlid
Association and has served as past Board of Trustee and Chair. He
currently serves as the Conservation Chair as well as the
ACA/Marineland Speakers Program Chair. Chuck serves on the Board of
Directors for both his local clubs, the Pacific Coast Cichlid
Association and the Silicon Valley Aquarium Society. In 2002
he and his wife Carol traveled to Lake Tanganyika to dive
with Ad Konings. In 2003 they went with him to
Lake Malawi to dive and observe the cichlids in their natural
habitat. Chuck also collects antique aquariums and vintage fancy
Vaseline glass fish bowls. <Ahh, thank you for sending this
along. Bob Fenner, who will post on the Crew's bio.
pages> |
Chuck... will clean fish tanks for food! |
Eileen Ridgeway/Yunachin joins WWM Crew
Hello Bob!<Eileen/Yunachin> Dear Bob, Greetings from sunny
Myrtle Beach. <In South Carolina I take it> My name is
Eileen but more known as Yunachin. I would like to start off
saying I was referred to through Jeni, AKA- Pufferpunk, via her
site: The Puffer Forum, where I have been visiting for a while.
She is a wonderful person. <Oh yes> My fondest memories of
having fish were when I was a little girl and we had Oscars. I
would sit for hours and gaze into those beef-cake eyes wishing
that I might be a fish one day. As I got older we had several
Bettas, tetras, Corys, catfish, guppies etc. I learned about the
spawning process with guppies very early in my keeping of them.
Then I got into larger goldfish care and Koi ponds. I was also
introduced into the spawning of convicts. I had my hands full.
When I met my husband I knew nothing about saltwater fish but
that soon changed. We own a LFS here and I have become quite the
aquarium addict. I divulged my time into learning about every
aspect of fish. We are common sights at local aquariums,
sometimes I think they might throw us out. Over the course of
time I have become knowledgeable in marine fish and
identification. I also have begun breeding clownfish and have
studied on this over a year. I currently have 7 tanks in the
house,. 4 full saltwater reefs and 3 freshwater tanks. I own 5
puffers; combined species of, Fahaka, Green-spotted and Hawaiian
White Spotted (separate tanks, of course!). We also have a ribbon
eel who has been living in captivity for over a year and a half
and is hand fed. There are various tangs, blennies, gobies,
clowns, wrasse and others in our collection. We also own a full
discus tank. Hands still full. Ha ha. I love caring for these
fish and I love learning about new things. I am not an aquarium
expert but I don't consider myself a beginner either. I
dedicate every waking moment to the fish and the learning
process. I am a young and vibrant aquarist with good information
and I am not afraid to admit when I am wrong. I would love to be
a member of your Crew & I hope I can become an asset to your
team. Have a fantastic day!-Eileen Ridgeway <Am sure
you've considered whether you have time for sharing/helping
here... That Jen/PP has mentioned what we do, how we do it. I do
welcome you to our association therefore. Again, thank you for
coming forward, sharing. Bob Fenner>
|
|
Daniela Rizzo joins the WWM Crew! 1/28/10
Hello! My name is Daniela, I'm an Italian cichlid keeper
since I was 16, many many years ago! I love both African and
American cichlids, I'm a founder member of AIC (Italian
Cichlid Association) and a member of ACA CARES program. In my
garden I have two ponds with goldfish, Koi, frogs, a turtle and a
lot of aquatic, bog and marshy plants. I feel comfortable
answering : cichlid keeping and breeding, pond life, pond, swampy
and bog plants.
Daniela Rizzo, Rome, Italy
<Hello Daniela, I'd certainly welcome you aboard. I've
read and enjoyed
your stuff in our Conscientious Aquarist magazine. Do please
write to Bob Fenner, here:
[email protected]
He's the guy who makes these decisions.
Cheers, Neale.>
Hello Daniela and thank you for coming forward. I welcome you to
the WWM Crew!
... and if you'd send along a brief pet-fish bio. about
yourself (and an image too if you'd like), we'll post it
here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/WWMAdminSubWebIndex/wwmcrew.htm
Thank you again. Bob Fenner
New member
Geez Bob, you are getting quite a following, I believe the
largest crew force I've seen since I've been here.
I'm sure Neale will welcome the addition.
James
<Assuredly we all do... Now if I can only get you to start
dive adventure traveling w/ me, taking pix below water...
B>
|
|
Richard Ross Thanks for the
welcome guys! Happy to be here, and please, if you see me doing
anything un WWM like let me know. Ryan, Still need that stand?
Still wanna do the article? And, Marina mentioned submitting pics
for the WWM Crew info page - any formatting desires? <Jpegs,
bmps... tiffs... most any format is convertible> About me: I
have been keeping aquariums since I was a kid, working at different
LFS during high school and even helping to build a new one. In
college (University of California, Davis - BA Philosophy) I got
into reptiles because they were easier to move from dorm to dorm
than fish tanks. I got back into aquariums in 1998 and was happy to
see all the advances in methodology. Currently, I have a 150 gallon
reef tank (with a 180 gallon sump) that was the featured aquarium
in the July 2004 edition Advanced Aquarist http://www.advancedaquarist.com/issues/july2004/aquarium.htm
I am also breeding the Sepia bandensis cuttlefish which I am
quasi-documenting at http://www.daisyhillcuttlefarm.com
I am good for most cephalopod questions and most reefing questions,
feeling confident about tank set up, remote sumps, current trends,
reef pests, cuttlefish and snake oil products. I am weak on fish
diseases, Latin names and anything freshwater (its been a long
time!). In my non reefing life I am an avid scuba diver, a stay at
home dad and husband, a professional juggler, a semi-retired
professional glass blower, a web designer, a black belt in the
martial art of Kuk Sool Won, and a video maker - all of which are
featured on my website http://www.stickycricket.com
<Thank you for sharing. Bob F> |
WWM crew member photo Heya, Bob :) our friend/crew
member Richard Ross was working with Eddie H of TP in Tonga on
that coral farm too (sadly, we passed each other in transit and
did not get to see/visit with each other!) But we seem to have
got a fine crew member photo out of it. That's not a
cephalopod on his head... he's just happy to see us. <Heee
hee. Great. Will post. RMF>
|
Meet Bobby Rudro, New WWM Crewmember
3/15/12
Please let me know what you need from me to get the process
started.
Bobby,
Cheers and welcome to the WWM Crew. BobF>
A quick Bio for you..
I have been involved in the Hobby/Trade for about 30years
now. Started with Freshwater tanks about 10years old and
have had a tank ever since. Got involved in Marine and Reef
tanks a few years later and have been working diligently ever
since to limit the number of poor invertebrates that die in my
care! ;) I owned a LFS store for a few years and decided
quickly that a hobby and a business seldom marry well together
and moved on to the hobby side full time. My favorite Hobby
Fish are certainly the Pseudanthias Genus and I am admittedly a
sucker for SPS corals!! I look forward to providing any
help I can with modern Reef and Marine keeping questions!!
Thank you. Will post/share. B
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|
Eric Russell I'm truly
flattered you think I can contribute/help, and I would consider it
an honor to do so. I must be honest, between my recent
promotion at work (I now "mentor" six of my comrades),
and administering to the local marine club, I find I don't have
as much casual time to spend on the web as I used to. But
that said, I know how much it would have meant to me so many years
ago; and still yet today, to have a competent avenue for questions,
and as such, I promise to do my best to answer my share of queries
with honest and helpful information. You probably still have
my home phone but just in case...803-561-XXXX...I'm usually
home from work by 6:00 pm. I've attached a pic and a brief bio
as follows: I've been fascinated with aquatic critters since I
can remember, and kept "glass jars" of various aquatic
life as soon as I was old enough to get near water. I
acquired my first "real" aquarium (10 gal. Metaframe) in
1973 and have had one or more of one size or another virtually ever
since. I spent 20 years building bombs in the Air Force and
I'm now warming a chair in front of a computer working on my
second career as a programmer/analyst. I had opportunity in
the late 70's to keep a planted aquarium in the Netherlands
(what else!), and after years of marine fish-only systems set up my
first reef tank in 1989 while stationed in the United Kingdom
keeping nothing but reef systems since. My current setup
consists of a 375 gal. reef biotope display (yep, got on the
bandwagon!) supported by a 55 gal. vegetable 'fuge and a 75
gal. sump. I also have a separate "frag" system in
a room over my shop which, by the way, if my wife ever inquires the
correct answer is; "why yes, it's perfectly reasonable for
Eric to be able to sell frags to help pay for his hobby!",
even though I seem to trade or give away rather than sell
<G>. I also have a 550 gallon concrete pond sunk in the
first level of a three-level 1800 sq. ft. deck, all of which I
built myself. Along with reefing,
woodworking/remodeling/construction is my avocation. While I
don't consider myself anything close to being an expert, I do
think of myself as a student of the hobby and have spent the last
few years relearning and rediscovering the wonders of this fabulous
and intoxicating pastime. Eric Russell |
|
Jen SaFranko Bio: 3/21/06 As corny as this
sounds I started my love affair with everything oceanic when I
was in 8th grade. I had a widely known obsession with the show
Sea Quest DSV and won an essay contest to fly to Universal to
meet the cast and crew. TV sets soon turned into a genuine
interest in the science behind the show an interest that stuck
with me all through high school and swept me towards a BS in
Marine Science from Rider University. I had the opportunity to
attend a few different schools and learn much about different
marine environments. I currently live in NJ (but I believe I left
my heart in Maui) and hope to work one day in the field I love so
much. I would love to share what I know (believe me, I am no
expert, but I know some) and learn as I go along. I am 25 and
live with my boyfriend of 10 years (yeah I know do the math.)
Right now I have a nano-reef tank (mostly softies) with just
added sump/refugium (thanks to the plumbing designs on WWM and
the bf willing to do the plumbing!), but I have worked with
1,000s of gallons in marine labs. Im new, still learning, and
very eager sometimes Im even told Im too info hungry and over
enthusiastic (for example the 5th hour at the state aquarium with
the family pulling me out by my belt loops!!) I adore WWM and
read it often, so to be apart of the crew flatters me immensely.
To be able to have just a little piece of such a beautiful
ecosystem in our homes is one of the greatest joys Ive ever
experienced (cant wait until I dive). I believe everyone should
share, experience, and have fun with what we call home. One of my
favorite quotes (and the one that won me the contest many years
ago haha) is We dont inherit the Earth from our parents; we
borrow it from our children. I look forward to helping and
growing with WWM.
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|
Sabrina Sharp (formerly
Fullhart) I just received an email from Ananda, asking if
I'd be interested in helping out with answering questions.
I've found WetWebMedia to be an invaluable resource, and have
directed plenty of friends to check it out; very awesome
informative site. A little about me: I've been keeping
freshwater fish for a little over ten years, and am absolutely
passionate about it. My strong points are general freshwater,
planted aquaria, Loricariids, freshwater shrimp, and
illness/disease treatment. I also have a lot of pond experience.
<Very good. We have excellent coverage on reef, general marine,
saltwater organism and scientific topics... but not much/enough in
your areas of expertise> My current projects include a 10g
nano-reef (am upgrading quite soon... too hard to keep stable); a
72g heavily planted aquarium with several freshwater shrimp
species, African butterflies (trying to breed), L-260, and Altum
angels currently in quarantine, hoping to join the main tank within
the month; two small ponds outside; and a few bettas.
<You're soon to know much more> If you'd like my
help, I'd be honored. -Sabrina C. Fullhart
WWM Crewmember Sabrina (Sharp) is visiting
BobF down in San Diego; we went out to visit the new/er SIO Aquarium, but
unfortunately she was eaten by a shark.
- 11/30/2012 |
|
|
With all this talk of photos.... It dawns on
me I've never submitted a pic. I have only one photograph of
myself, in Idaho, after swimming in my favorite spot in the Moyie
river - and not certain at all that it is decent/acceptable for
posting with my bio - too risqué? If so,
I'll see what I can come up with. I know there's a camera
around here, somewhere. <What a babe! Schwing!> If this
*is* acceptable, to whom do I send it? <Uhh, pet fish models
inc. Actually this is it> Also, of note, shrimp article is
coming along well. I'm not exactly full of time right now,
with packing stuff up an' all, but I'm hoping it will
come out nicely. <Bout time! Or we'll Photoshop out that
rock and give you goose feathers!!!! Bob> Thanks, -Sabrina
|
Kevin Sliech Ive had a reef
aquarium since the beginning of 2000 have had community
freshwater aquariums for several years before that. Ive worked at
Aqua Dreams in Feeding Hills, MA for over three years where I was
first turned on to this overly addicting hobby. Given the
opportunity to head on over to Aruba after graduation, I received
my open water scuba certification in the summer of 02. Since then
I have acquired a few more certifications and had the opportunity
to more Caribbean diving. I also LOVE New England diving and go
any chance I get. In real life Im a full time
undergraduate mechanical engineering student at Western New
England College and still manage to work part-time at Aqua
Dreams. I have a 120g mixed reef thats been up since fall of 01.
I regularly propagate both soft and stony coral as well as
zoanthids and have reared a couple of fry from my breeding pair
of Banggai cardinalfish.
|
Feeling a little cold in
Cancun
|
Welcome Joshua Solomon to the WWM Crew
4/24/09
Re: Referred to contact you by Linda Close First off
I am a college student at University of Central Florida in the
field of Biology. This is my fifth year of school, I am six
classes away from a degree in forensics, but my real passion is
reef aquariums, hence my pursuing Biology instead.
My background is in scuba diving, and my instructor rating in
scuba landed me my job at the Living Seas Aquarium at EPCOT (yes
I know the aquarium is a mess). In the mean time I had been an
avid hobbyist for several years reading everything I can get my
hands on. I keep three reef aquariums in my home, and my
knowledge gained from personal experience as well as reading and
asking questions found me a position working as an aquarist
rather than a diver at the Living Seas while I continue working
on my Biology degree.
On a daily basis I work on trying to recover mistreated reef
tanks and educate people I work with about what not to do. The
well being of the animals we keep are of great importance to
me.
I am just a committed hobbyist that is happy to help others. I
certainly am not an expert, but everyday I am amazed by how much
I have yet to learn. In my mind my best talent is I am not afraid
to admit when I don't know the answer, and I find it out.
After watching WetWebMedia for so long, I have a pretty good idea
of what you all are about, and I would love to be a part of
it.
Josh
<Ahh, thank you for coming forward Josh, and thank you for
sharing. Bob Fenner>
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|
LA good times, recruitment, Jordan
Stari 3/5/12
Hi Bob, it would be an absolute honor to contribute to WWM. I
have learned so much from your site and I would love the chance
to give something back. I am available to help in anyway you see
fit.
Jordan
<Ahh! Outstanding. I welcome you to our association. Please
send along a brief bio. to share w/ the present Crew as well as
to post... with a pic if you'd like.
Re: LA good times, recruitment
I have had numerous freshwater aquariums with varying levels of
success since the mid-eighties but my interest in marine tanks
did not begin until after college. Upon graduation, I moved back
to Louisiana and spent every available hour fishing for speckled
trout in the gulf. Like the truly great fishermen of my family I
was more skilled in telling tales than actually catching fish.
One hot fish-less afternoon in the marsh a light bulb went off. I
would set up a saltwater tank to see how bait fish/shrimp behave
when not attached to a hook. This would provide the edge I needed
and transform me into the trout master. There was also the
thought- "How hard could it be?" With visions of the
Great Barrier Reef in my mind and limited resources I set up a 20
gallon tank of death. Perplexed with why I could not keep
anything alive I found a local fish store that provided some
basic information and soon enough I could keep minnows alive. I
was on my way to becoming the master fishermen of legends but
somewhere along the way my minnow research tank was transformed
into a tiny little reef. Twelve years later, the trout still
elude me but the little minnow experiment has turned into a full
blown passion for marine life. WWM has been the most beneficial
tool in my quest for knowledge and I truly appreciate the chance
to give something back to the site that has helped me so much
through the years.
Jordan Stari
|
New Crew Member: Jordan Stari from
LA
2/8/12
All, pleased to introduce Jordan, whom I met last wknd. visiting
out in the bayou in Louisiana... his short bio. below. Lynn, you
and I may finally get goosed, okay, the momentum to produce that
key to marine inverts... a fave area of Jordan's. B
|
Graham Stephan
I've always been interested in marine life since I was very
young. The vivid coloration and shape of graceful saltwater
fish has always mesmerized me. I've currently been in the
hobby for 4 years and have kept (and studied, as far as
identification goes) many species of small polyped
scleractinians (SPS), soft corals, LPS, as well as Tridacna
clams. I currently am "working" as an Assist. Manager
of an online livestock retailer, www.reefermadness.us,
which gives me a good experience with seeing hundreds -- if not
thousands -- of corals on a daily basis from around the world.
My current tank is a total of 300 gallons. This includes a 150
gallon show tank (5x2x2) and a 150 gallon propagation tank. For
filtration, the tank mainly depends on a large Euro-Reef
protien skimmer, an ozonizer, as well as biological filtration
via the rockwork. This tank is deticated to Acropora. Almost
every coral in my tank is unusual and exotic. The tank is lit
with 4x 400wt 20,000k Radiums on two dual PFO HQI ballasts. I
currently have roughly 5500gph running through the main tank by
an Amp Master 3000 (connected to two 1" seaswirls) and a
Mag 24. My tank is also dominated to one other species --
Pseudanthias bartlettorum, otherwise known as Bartletts
Anthias. I currently have 11 individuals which form a loose
school in the tank. Any questions regarding corals or algae
problems can be sent my way. I've gone through just about
every type of algae (good and bad) since I started back in
2001. Some pictures can be viewed here:
http://community.webshots.com/user/pineapplehouse
Take Care, Graham.
|
A view of Graham's "old" tank
|
My name is Graham
Tasker, and I'm a marine-aholic. "Hi Graham."
1/2/07 I live in East Baldwin, Maine. That's about 25 miles
from Portland, and about 20 miles from Westbrook, where I grew up.
My first foray into the world of aquatics was when I was 8 yrs-old.
(1988) I had a little 10-gal with one of those famous Penn Plax
starter kits, including that hallmark of freshwater filtration: the
air-driven floss-filled corner filter. Wow! My little tetras and
gouramis were so lucky to have me. My local video store had just
been bought and transformed into a pet store called Westbrook
Aquarium. (The herps section was actually where the old adult
section had been, hehe.) The owner soon realized he couldn't
compete with the Kennel Shop chain on all fronts, and went from
rodents, birds, herps and freshwater to just herps and freshwater.
For the next 3 or so years, the shop grew a customer base with
their experienced staff and they also dropped the herps altogether.
My interest shifted from freshwater community livestock to the
"beginner cichlids": Jack Dempseys (sp?) and Oscars. Of
course, this meant my 10-gal was a little too small. My brand new
30gal was my salvation. The only thing I couldn't quite get
into, was that the Oscars were so cute when you bought 'em, but
they grew up so fast and you had to get rid of 'em. Plus,
decorations get moved, water quality gets all fouled up with my
juvenile propensity for watching them eat. And eat and eat. That
led me back to the community fishes. For years, my 30gal was setup,
with no major changes to the community nature, except that my LFS
started carrying more aquatic plants and I was interested in them a
little. I can't remember exactly when, but my interest had
waned in freshwater aquariums in favor of social tropical birds. By
the time I was 14-yrs old, I had been out of the hobby for two or
more years and missed the swap of my LFS from "Westbrook
Aquarium" to "Westbrook Aquarists". I had been
friends with a fellow that had a 55-gallon - that was still the
biggest tank I'd ever seen privately owned back then - and I
participated in his hobby with him, too. I was a sophomore in high
school and one fortuitous day in biology class, I met my would-be
mentor for the next four years (and still, really). Rick Oellers
came to lecture in my classroom about the diversity of the reef,
the complexity and inherent simplicity in it's makeup, and -
the clincher - that per capita, inch for inch, the reef has more
life than anywhere else in the world! I was hooked. My teacher
harnessed my enthusiasm and made me ambassador to the LFS (of which
Rick was a 50% partner and operator of the marine section) and gave
me free reign to design and stock a 90-gallon micro-reef (w/ fish)
in our classroom. I got class-credit goofing off and exemption from
quizzes, too! Rick had "classes" for all levels of
hobbyist that he conducted in the store after closing, and I was
there for every one of them. Within two months, he offered me a job
(I later found out that one of the original employees that was
there when I brought in rolled pennies to buy fish endorsed me) in
the marine section, and 5 months after that, I had a key to the
store and the responsibility of opening up on Saturday and Sunday.
I loved my job so much, and Rick knew it. I would go out with him
on service days and work on $50k reef setups in million dollar
mansions, some of which were transferred to our store for display
when the owners tired of them. We prospered under the influence of
our dedicated customers and staff, and Rick bought the entire
business, and expanded into the neighboring building. We had
customers drive to us from out of state as far away as New York for
special orders and advice. Finally, after four years and my exit
from high school, I left to try my hand at a job in the computer
field, but always missed the marine trade. I still maintained a
40gal (breeder) composed of a Rhinecanthus aculeatus, Lysmata
amboinensis, Odonus niger, Premnas biaculeatus & Heteractis
crispa, and Synchiropus picturatus. This tank was pristine and
perfect for four whole years while I was away from retail and
preoccupied by my personal life. Unfortunately, when I moved into a
different water district, the practices that had worked so well for
me before (De-ionization with an apparently used-up cartridge) my
tank started to slip away. Eventually, I gave my specimens back to
the LFS so they could live and I disassembled my system. (My mother
cried that day) Over the following winter, my 40gal broke in
storage and I was further discouraged and distanced from the hobby.
I even lost touch with Rick for almost 10 years! Finally, this
November (2006) my wife-to-be and I moved into a house that had a
20-high built into the wall in the dining-room/kitchen. The entire
time we were moving in, we had the doors wide open and the tank
dropped into the fifties, but we thought it was empty. Once we were
settled a bit, I couldn't help but do some water tests and see
where we stood. I didn't realize it looking at it at first, but
when I got in there and started poking around, I realized it was a
marine setup, but the previous owners had removed their pumps,
heaters, and all but a few pieces of LR. I did a 75% W.C. and dug
up my old equipment, consisting of a Ebo-Jager 75w, two Hagen 402
pumps, one 802, four Rio 600/400/200, and a pair of mini power
filters left over from my freshwater days. Within a day, two Humbug
Dascyllus showed their faces that I didn't know were there
(They went to the LFS as soon as possible)! Now I'm back in
touch with Rick and we hang out as much as possible. He operates
his service company still, but got out of the retail gig when it
burned him out and he yelled at a customer that thought he should
be able to keep buying fish that he didn't have the capacity to
care for. In addition to his service, he has a mariculture of the
Aiptasia-eating Nudibranchs going in the upstairs, and a huge LR.
curing facility in the basement. He works within fifty feet of an
acrylic habitat designer called Marine Eco Habitats and so, when a
customer has a special order for a tank, he just walks across the
hall and hands the designer a P.O. and within a day a brand new
300gal Jelly tank or 600gal touch tank is ready to go. They design
and build lobster tanks for restaurants, too, and when they need to
send... well never mind that. Suffice to say, their operation is a
match made in heaven. I will be back with Rick in short time, but
for now, I am a SAAB & Volvo technician in Portland. My current
employer has been very good to me, so I will give him a year's
notice before I take my leave of him and pursue my real passion
again. Actually, I love the marine hobby for the same reasons I
love working on my BMW (and to a lesser degree, other peoples'
cars): I love solving problems and making things work. I take great
satisfaction in seeing something improved by my hand. So. There you
have it. That's a truncated version of my live as related to
Fish. I am knowledgeable about water quality parameters, heaters,
lights, biological filtration (except for fluidized beds), protein
skimming (and it's necessity), Chiller service/repair, stocking
limits and selection for given volume, and repair of all things
electrical and otherwise. One of my strengths is with triggerfish,
and how to keep them from eating your crustaceans and other
inverts. There isn't a single trigger I haven't been bitten
by. I stay away from Freshwater now, as I decided I wanted to focus
on Marine when I was 15, and have stayed out of the fresh circle
since then. I don't have any pond experience whatever. My
invert knowledge is also limited, though I just need a refresher
course, as I used to retail them. Finally, any questions that I
want to be able to answer, but can't will be fielded through
Rick via me as proxy. Rick has Julian Sprung and Martin Moe on his
speed-dial, among others, and wants to contribute, but has to keep
his involvement remote for now. (He has enough stress in his life
already). Hope you're still awake! I'm happy to be a part
of this community, and hope to see some of you at my first MACNA in
Pittsburg this year. Graham F. Tasker (AKA Gcracker) Graham F.
Tasker (Gcracker) 12/29/06 Thanks for the personal reply Bob!
(I wonder what/where the mysterious gastro's will be.) I have
to ask, do you offer everyone with a background in marine aquatics
a position at WWM or do I stand out for some reason? ;) I am
absolutely flattered, and would love to do whatever I can to help.
Honestly, I can't imagine I am of the caliber you require for
the incredibly detailed answers people quest for here. I think I am
quite under-qualified, actually. Is there some sort of entrance
exam? <Heeee! I hope not> I would absolutely love an
opportunity to dive with you in HI! (Did I read that correctly? It
seemed like an offer to join you both at WWM and on the reef...) My
fiancé and I are thinking of somewhere
tropical to honeymoon without the kids, and Hawaii would definitely
qualify. Maybe a barter system could be arranged? Seriously tho, If
there is any way I can help, I'll do my best. I could even try
to get Rick involved through me, since he is awful about replying
to e-mails and the like. <You are welcome to join me in HI most
anytime... I go there frequently to work on the properties, dive,
chat with friends, enjoy myself> Speaking of Rick, have you two
ever met? I mentioned your name and he certainly knew who you were,
but not that you operate WWM. I didn't think to inquire further
on your acquaintance. <Mmm, not as far as I recall, no> At
any rate, let me now how you want to proceed. I'm not averse to
answering some questions, but I warn you: I'm just getting
reacquainted with the hobby after a hiatus - so I might be rather
mediocre. <No worries. All we ask is that you look at, respond
to what you feel comfortable with> I'll finish with a quick
report on Rhinecanthus aculeatus: When they go hungry for a day,
they may greedily devour every piece of grape Caulerpa in sight! (I
just wanted to withhold food until my P. Skimmer goes online this
Sunday...) At your service, Graham F. Tasker (Gcracker) P.S. I
attached a shot of each of my triggerfish, and subsequently thought
of a good use for me! I can take pictures of any fish that I can
get my eyes on and contribute to the library... if that seems
useful, Lemme know. Some notes re conventions we use: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/WWMAdminSubWebIndex/crewsupwebmail.htm
Please send along a brief bio. to post, and a pic of yourself if
you'd like... and thank you for sharing. Bob Fenner> |
Bio shot for Graham Bob, <Big G!> Finally got
around to getting in front of a camera for my bio. Stunning, huh?
BTW, do you have nay specifics on the possible Bonaire trip? Am
getting my passport anyway, but was wondering what else was
required for me... -Graham <Mmm, am likely hauling out there
next month... and the Crew in... was it in May? When would you
like to go? Are you dive-certified? In good shape!? BobF>
Mas mejor!
|
Welcome Jessica Timko to the WWM Crew 9/23/08
Bob, It would be my pleasure to assist you with any ventures,
ESPECIALLY WWM. I myself, have benefited from the wealth of
information offered there. Since Ive started my own business, I
found myself having lots of free time. I got a part time job at
Custom Aquatics in Oceanside, <Ahh, Todd Gabriel, a fine
fellow> but other than those 20 hrs a week, I can be free for
most anything. Just let me know the next step. Jessy<Easily
and gladly! Our log in for WWM Mail is: ... Please send along a
pic and brief bio. for us to post/share on WWM... And thank you
for sharing! BobF.> Jessica's Bio I live
in San Diego, California, by way of Tampa, Florida, by way of
Warren, Ohio. IÃ'¹ve always been easily
enraptured by different subjects in my life. Finding myself
immersed in the study of world religions one year to the
mastering of digital art the next. Each new frontier teaches me
something amazing about the world around me and helps me to view
it in a new and exciting light. I started college at 16 and
finished with my MBA at 21. IÃ'¹ve traveled
the world on various humanitarian missions and on vacations
alike, and I like to think that seeing the world at its best and
at its worst has helped give me a broader perspective on how I
live my everyday life. I entered the absolutely addicting hobby
of reef keeping at the age of 23 and quickly fell into my old
habits of researching and reading everything I could get my hands
on. Saltwater aquariums and the surrounding community is my
passion in my off hours, my profession is running my marketing
and advertising company. IÃ'¹m on the Board
of Directors for the San Diego Marine Aquarium Society and have
helped more than a few vendors in this industry with their
marketing efforts. I have a 150 gallon mixed reef that takes all
my money and I couldnÃ'¹t be any happier with
it. I am excited to help out other reefers who need guidance,
just as I came to this site when I was at wits end with a few of
my tank issues. I've attached two pictures as well. One just
seemed so apropos and the other is just a recent Regards,
Jessy
|
MarcM, BobF, and JessT
|
Scott Tomko 4/30/10
On March 15th 1986 I came butt-first into the
world. I spent the first 18 years of my life in rural upstate NY.
At 18 I attended Coastal Carolina University in Conway SC. After
4 years, in 2008 I graduated with a BS in Biology. I returned to
Albany in early 2009 to start a marine ornamental hatchery.
It's about a year later now, and I've got a good bit of
the hatchery started. Currently I'm acquiring broodstock, and
learning the ins and outs of hatching/larval rearing. If you know
anyone with mated pairs, send them my way!
At CCU I spent a good deal of time out in the salt marshes and
streams of the low country. It was a teaching oriented college
(as opposed to research oriented), so I got to spend a lot of
time with the professors. As far as paid positions go, I was an
undergraduate research assistant for two professors. The first
was mostly lab work relating to DNA fingerprinting of Ammodramus
caudacutus. Later on I spent a summer working on a Crassostrea
virginica settlement study. Unpaid I participated in a study on
stream bio-assessment and one relating to Dionaea muscipula.
Still being young, this is the extent of my formal participation
in scientific research. I do hope to get my name all the way to
the left on a few articles one day.
During my last year of college I caught the marine aquarium
bug. It's an addiction I swear. For the last three years
I've been neck deep in aquatic text's and forums. I'm
particularly fascinated with the relationship between plants and
animals. An aquarium is an ecosystem in itself. If we can
understand the balance of all its parts, little input/output is
required. Aquaponics, co-culturing, and algal scrubbers all float
my boat. My main focus however is marine ornamental breeding. I
balance my days between setting up a hatchery and remodeling
other peoples homes. Hey, you've got to make a living
somehow.
|
Hello Mr. Fenner,
<Just Bob please Scott>
It was great finally getting to meet you last weekend at CMAC V. I
was honestly a bit shocked when Linda asked me to attend with her.
The opportunity to meet you was too much to pass up. I am a huge
fan of yours, and love Linda. She is a great woman isn't she?
Enough about my feelings though, to business.
It would be a great honor to be able to help with Wet Web Media in
whatever fashion you see fit. I understand if you have enough help
already, and do not need my services. My feelings won't be
hurt. But if you would like my help, I'm at your service. My
area of expertise is in marine ornamental breeding. I do my best to
keep up on new developments in breeding technique/technology. In my
basement I have a small hatchery where I put these new ideas into
practice.
Linda mentioned that punctuality was important with WWM. I have
time just about every evening to answer e-mail, or update whatever
is necessary. She also mentioned that you are a talented linguist.
My skills in this department are not as admirable as I'd like.
I'll do my best though.
Practice makes perfect.
<Ah yes>
My formal training is in Biology, not specifically marine Biology.
I graduated from a state school called Coastal Carolina University
with a BS in Biology in 2008. Since then I've been a full-time
prospective commercial hatchery owner. One day I'll get it all
up and running. For the time being it's pretty small scale. I
wouldn't be anywhere near as successful a breeder if it
wasn't for other peoples help and input. I'd love to share
what I now know. Let me know what I can do to help.
Sincerely,
Scott Tomko
<Please do join us at WWM... The log in to answer mail is:
.....
Your in-folder... ScottT
I welcome you to our association. BobF |
Ted Truex, IMAC
and WWM 6-28-05 Hi Bob, <Ah Ted, there you are!> It was
nice seeing you IMAC. I never got the chance to tell you that I
really enjoyed the presentation. The slides (and video) reminded me
of the diving I did last February in Palau. <And trips to
come...> I am interested in helping with WWM. Please let me know
what I can do to help. See you at MACNA? Ted |
Ted Truex 6/31/05 Bob, A little about me. I
blame Jacques Cousteau for everything! At some point while
reading his book or his adventures as documented in National
Geographic magazine or while watching one of his many
documentaries, I realized that the sea enthralled me. I tried my
hand at fish only marine aquariums many years ago but gave up
when I couldn't justify the failures that resulted in the
deaths of the livestock. Many moons later, I took scuba lessons
and realized that my time in the water only partially satisfied
me. I did some research and discovered that the hobby had changed
and that people were keeping corals and fish for extended
(years!) periods of time in very beautiful settings. I was hooked
again. I now have two reef systems successfully running (a 90g
and a 325g system). I look forward to helping out on WWM by
answering questions so that others can enjoy this fascinating
Ted
|
Michelle Tseng pic w/Bob Fenner @
Reefapalooza 10/25/11
Please forward this to Bob - thanks!
Hi Bob,
<Hey Michelle!>
I truly loved meeting you yesterday at Reef-a-Palooza and
hearing your talk about setting up a collecting station in
Fiji. I brought my husband into the hobby, and he used to
complain about the prices of saltwater fish. Our running
joke is that now whenever that same complaint is about to
roll off his tongue, I tell him, "okay, then YOU go
buy plane tickets, rent a boat, catch the fish in the wild
yourself, and ship them back alive to our house." Of
course, then he would look at me sheepishly and say,
"Well...I guess that's true." It's pretty
amazing what the Smiths have done, and thank goodness for
people like them that are willing to go through such a
process so people like me can enjoy the fish hobby. Our
tanks really provide us with a piece of nature (or a peace
of nature) - haha.
<Ahh!>
I've always loved animals but really delved into the
fish hobby in high school when my dad finally allowed me to
have fish as pets (he was a neat freak and wouldn't
allow a dog or even a hamster). To his dismay, one 10
gallon aquarium quickly turned into three, with me breeding
freshwater fish and setting up a 90 gallon saltwater tank.
My original intention was to become a Marine Biologist, but
health problems got in my way during college and I actually
ended up with an English degree from UCLA. But all was not
lost - I volunteered for 4 yrs during college at UCLA's
Ocean Discovery Center underneath the Santa Monica Pier
(now it's Heal the Bay) and one semester at the Long
Beach Aquarium (I had to wake up at 5:30 am) to get there
by 8am. I was also scuba certified in UCLA's scientific
diving program (tons of fun), and now my husband is also a
scuba diver. Now in my 30's, I teach both 8th grade
Physical Science and English at a middle school in Irvine
(I'm certified to teach both secondary science and
English) and really try to show my students how amazing the
world around them really is (if Chemistry isn't
amazing, what is?). After the standardized state tests in
May, I always include an ecology/environmental/ocean
curriculum for my students. And when I can fit it in
(furlough days permitting), I go through my "Finding
Nemo" Ppt juxtaposing the animated characters w/the
real ones to increase their appreciation....and then after
that, I tell them they will never see Finding Nemo in the
same way again and point out all the subtle jokes to them
while showing them the movie. I notice that when I teach,
it's me that always ends up learning more.
I pulled your book (The Conscientious Marine Aquarist) from
my fish library book shelf, and it has the original cover
with a Flame Angel and a copyright of 1998. I knew from
just reading your forward that this book would be something
I would enjoy, and after purchasing the book, I could tell
you were a funny guy. Little did I know that after meeting
you that you are even funnier and spirited than I imagined!
:D
Currently, we have a 2 1/2 yr 90 gallon reef and fish tank
in which we push the bioload by normal standards but have
not had any fish casualties in over a year, a 24 gal Nano
tank that grows 5 types of Caulerpa that we use to feed our
tangs in our 90 gal, a 30 gallon freshwater tank right by
my bed so I can stare at it into the wee hours of the
morning, and a small 30 gallon pond in our backyard with
just 2 goldfish and a couple of mosquito fish. Oops....and
I forgot about our 3 gallon Betta tank in our master
bathroom and my large fishbowl that houses 2 white cloud
minnows with lucky bamboos that only needs top offs.
I've often envisioned our elliptical grass patch in our
backyard as an outdoor lagoonarium. A girl can dream,
right? :)
<All can, should>
If you're curious about my Finding Nemo Ppt, let me
know; it's pretty entertaining. I can email it to you.
I also noticed on your web site that you have many crew
members that you've added over time; I'd love to
help in any way I can by proof reading, editing, or maybe
even by writing short articles; perhaps even targeting a
younger crowd and relating fish keeping to science they
learn in school.
<Is it possible that you have a few minutes some days to
help us help others? By responding to queries?>
I really appreciate that you are so accessible and took the
time to give an off-the-beaten-path talk at Reef-a-palooza.
Now I have an even greater appreciation for how fish and
corals are collected in the wild, and am relieved that
there are people out there like the Smiths that propagate
coral in the way they do to help preserve our oceans.
I've also included the picture of us at
Reef-a-palooza!
<Meeting you and your husband was the highlight of the
day>
Hope to hear back from you,
Michelle Tseng Sun
<My thanks again for your shared enthusiasms/life. Do
please make it known if you have time, interest in joining
our Crew. Bob Fenner>
Ã'¸.Ã'·Ã'´Ã'¯`Ã'·...Ã'¸><((((Ã'º>
Ã'¸.Ã'·Ã'´Ã'¯`Ã'·...Ã'¸><((((Ã'º>
Ã'·.Ã'¸Ã'¸.Ã'·Ã'´Ã'¯`><((((Ã'º>
Ã'·.Ã'¸.Ã'·Ã'´Ã'¯`Ã'·...Ã'¸><((((Ã'º>
|
|
Re: pic w/Bob Fenner @
Reefapalooza 10/25/11
Dear Bob,
<Misch>
Wow - I would LOVE and be honored to be a part of WWM!!!
<Ahh, good>
I'm currently on medical leave (having a current series
of health challenges again and surgeries) so I have plenty of
time to help out with inquiries, especially right now. The
vast knowledge of your crew is somewhat intimidating, but
I'm confident I can be helpful in one way or another.
<Am very sure you can, will>
BTW - I forgot to tell you that my husband and I were
actually married two yrs ago at the Long Beach Aquarium, and
I printed "Tanks for Coming!" on all of the wedding
favors - lol.
Please let me know what I can do to help.
Thanks,
Michelle (also known by friends as "Mish the Fish"
or "fichecake")
<Please find our webmail log in at: XXXX
Thank you and welcome to the Crew! Bob Fenner
Re: Michelle Tseng on the WWM Crew!
Welcome Michelle!!!!
It's intimidating at first ...
just jump in!
take the letters you feel confident in answering .. and
remember this:
When you're having the sort of day where you feel like
writing
"Why not just pour a gallon of bleach in there and kill
them all at once!"
remember - we've all been there. Just put the letter back
in the IN box and take the day off.
regards
D
Thanks for the welcome and the great advice Darrel!!
Michelle |
|
Re: Michelle Tseng on the WWM Crew!
10/26/11
Welcome Michelle!
Thanks Sara!
Re: Michelle Tseng on the WWM Crew! 10/26/11
Welcome, Michelle.
But can we avoid using nicknames for folders, unless
correspondence will be signed "from Fishcake" or
similar? If the message begins "Dear Michelle", then I
for one would prefer the folder I put it into was named
"Michelle".
Don't have to try and remember anything clever.
I like the fact James puts his nickname into brackets after his
proper name. That helps.
Cheers, Neale
Noted and changed. Good recommendation.
Michelle (Fichecake)
Re: Michelle Tseng on the WWM Crew!
10/28/11
Hi Michelle,
Welcome on board!! It sounds like you have a nice mix of
experience along with both a Science and English background; Im
sure you'll be an asset to the crew! Your "Finding Nemo
Ppt" sounds interesting. I have a "tween" daughter
with whom I'm on "borrowed time", i.e., still
listens to me (especially when the learning opportunity is
disguised as fun!) I've actually used a similar technique
with her when I see an interesting show on the History or Science
Channel, subjects that I know would normally bore the tears out
of her if they were only in plain written text. When kids
haven't lived long enough to have formed a good frame of
reference on these subjects yet, I think anything that can make
it more "real" for them will help them better
internalize the knowledge. One time I even took her to D.C. to
see the Lincoln Theatre after she took a particular interest in a
show that did a reenactment of the night of his death on the
History Channel. I intentionally made the trip the week after the
show while it was still fresh in her mind, and it completely
mesmerized her! It made me excited to see her getting excited
about a subject that, in general, bored ME to tears at her age,
because ALL we did for history back then was memorize dates! So
kudos on finding a neat (is it still "cool" to say that
word? Haha!) way to reach the younger set.
~ Sue
Thanks Sue! :)
|
Welcome Scott Vallembois to the WWM Crew!
10/20/07 Hi Bob, this is Scott Vallembois from
momsfishsupply.com/glass-holes.com. It was great to finally talk
with you today. Thank you for all your advice and input. As we
had talked about, I would be happy to spend some time helping out
with the replies on Wetwebmedia.com. I have close to 25 years
aquarium experience ranging from goldfish to planted discus tanks
to full blown SPS reef tanks and just about everything in between
(never anything brackish). I would be happy to answer anything,
but as you know the last few years I have come to specialize in
reef tank set up. Let me know if you need anymore from me to get
set up and I look forward to hear from you. Thanks much Scott
<Thank you for coming forward Scott. As we chatted over the
phone, I am very glad to have you help us respond to queries at
WWM, and to help you and your partner in furthering your business
endeavours. Do please send along a brief bio. for posting with a
pic/likeness if you wish. Am hoping to "goose" you and
EricR into writing "complete" pieces on (marine)
aquarium engineering, assembly... BobF.
Here's ScottV down in Cozumel, diving, making
pix 3/09.
|
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Twothless (Paul
Vaughn) Bio and Photo 7/28/07 Hello to everyone! My name is
Paul Vaughn and I am 33 years old. I was born and raised here in
Florida and have lived in Key West, Miami, Ft Lauderdale,
Bradenton, Venice and Jacksonville. I lived in Freeport, Texas a
couple times and was in Vermont for a year. I am a 3rd generation
shrimper and was pretty much raised in the Caribbean, Atlantic and
Gulf. I've been through hurricanes in the middle of the gulf ,
seen Mola Mola as large as a queen sized bed, water spouts raining
fish onto the deck and countless species of fish, turtles and
crustaceans/inverts. I consider myself a very lucky man to have
been able to experience life on the ocean. It truly is the greatest
wonder of nature I have ever known. I currently live in
Jacksonville Beach where I've been located for about 15 years.
I miss the pristine, emerald waters of the Keys but there isn't
much surf to be caught so I remain here in Jax Bch. Heh, those of
us from Jax Beach fondly refer to our home as "The Armpit of
America". The dingy brown water from the St. Johns River tends
to justify our nickname for this little stretch of coast. I started
keeping freshwater aquatic animals, responsibly, a little over ten
years ago and throughout the years, it has grown into a full
fledged obsession. I am well learned in parasite
identification/eradication. I also excel at DIY and love nothing
more than to tweak existing products to make them better as well as
designing and fabricating filters, tanks and mechanical devices of
all sorts. I currently keep Fancy Goldfish, Shubunkins, Loaches,
Corydoras, Fancy Plecos, Danios, Tetras, Sailfin Mollies, F8
Puffers, Apple Snails, Fancy Guppies, A river Cooter, A Razorback
Musk Turtle (female), A Veiled Chameleon (male), Oriental Fire
Belly Toads and the list grows..... I build houses and everything
under its roof. I specialize in framing from the slab to the peak
and very much like the challenge of conventional roof framing.
Currently, I am a tile-setter and hardwood floor installer as I was
given an offer I couldn't refuse, indoor work for the same
income. I have been skateboarding for twenty years and surfing for
15. In my free time, that is, when I am not performing water
changes, working, surfing or skateboarding, I enjoy reading books
on Cosmology, Geology, Physics, Sociobiology, Evolution, Evo/Devo,
Evo/Psycho, Microbiology and a few other topics. I owe my
insatiable hunger for knowledge to my early years on the ocean and
a close friend who handed me a beat-up copy of Carl Sagan's
"Dragons of Eden". I've been in love with science
ever since. I'm looking forward to being a part of WWM as I
have used its massive resources countless times in the past and
I'd love to contribute in any way I can. <Will post... for
he who speaks does not know and he who knows does not
speak> |
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Pufferpunk (Jeni) Hi Bob, <Hello Jeni> I have
been keeping fish for over 25 years. I have had my own cat &
dog grooming business for over 18 years. I worked in the aquarium
industry for over 8 years. <Sounds like you've "paid
your dues".> In the end of that career, I was managing
the fish dept of a major million dollar pet shop. I was
responsible for stocking, cleaning, medicating & selling fish
for 70 tanks. Presently, I have 10 tanks. 6 are puffer tanks. I
have extensive knowledge of FW (mostly oddballs) & BW fish
& their care. I have moved some of my BW fish into a 55g SW
tank along w/clownfish & damsels, but am new to that end of
the hobby. I have a 90g w/several rare Plecos, rainbowfish,
synodontis, Corys, Leaffish, purple spotted gudgeons (spawning
pair), loaches & my prized, yellow-finned Chalceus. I have a
total of 14 puffers. A 12" Fahaka puffer (Tetraodon
lineatus) in a 125g, living with 10" Adonis & 10"
gold spotted Plecos, 2 (6") green spotted puffers (t
nigroviridis), a 5" Ceylon puffer (t fluviatilis) in a 55g
living w/a clownfish & several damsels, 2 South American
puffers (Colomesus asellus) & a dwarf puffer (c
travancoricus), living in a 50g w/a blood parrot, frontosa
cichlid & royal pleco & 3 figure 8s (t biocellatus) . I
just got 4 new SA puffers that are in a 10g quarantine. I have a
15g cycled tank waiting for an ambush predator puffer (not sure
what kind yet) I have had experience with several other puffers
also. I co-own a pufferfish website: THE PUFFER FORUM. I have
been a scuba diver for over 5 years, logged over 200 dives &
am an underwater photographer. I ride my own 1982 custom
Shovelhead Harley-Davidson. My Jack Russell Terrier (Lulu the
Wonderdog) rides on the back. I love to garden. <We
"had" a Jack Russell (Rudy)... he unfortunately took
one long stay too many in the canyon in the back... am still
hoping he "walked out" with someone rather than being
consumed by coyotes> If you are interested in seeing my tanks,
I have a lot of photos recently posted at WWF. <Yes! The WWF
did come up (finally) and I saw and posted your bio. materials
with your offer on WWM this AM> Thanks for your interest in
me! Jeni (Pufferpunk) <Jeni, I thank you for volunteering.
Will you try answering freshwater as well as brackish questions?
Will cc the existing WWM Crew here to welcome you aboard... there
are some conventions on how we respond (a title on the response)
if you'd take a look in the "sent" folder on the
WWM mail... and am sure Antoine will direct you to an
accumulation of input on what we do. Again, thank you for
sharing. Bob F> Re: Volunteering My Services Bob, Thank
you for bringing me into your Crew! <Thank you> Will you
try answering freshwater as well as brackish questions? I would
prefer to answer questions on puffers & BW fish, as these are
my present expertise. <Okay> Do you have a preference for
how folks respond to you at WWM, perhaps a last name or just Jeni
or Pufferpunk? I'm kind of partial to Pufferpunk <Okay,
will add you on the Dailies as such> We "had" a Jack
Russell (Rudy)... I hope too that he is safe & happy
somewhere! <Be seeing you, Bob F>
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Our (sexy) Easy Rider! The one,
the only, Pufferpunk (and her little dog, Lulu, too)!
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Offer of help, Simon Trippick Joins the Crew!
1/7/10
Hi Bob,
<Good day Simon>
I wrote an article for you guys a year or so ago about an ATS
that you have on your site that you now have in your FAQ's.
You asked if I would have the time to help out on your site. I
(politely!) refused at the time because I did not have the time,
but my wife has now moved away during the week to do her PhD and
I find that I am at a bit of a loose end on the evenings now, so
I would be able to give an hour or so 4 or 5 days a week at
least.
<Great>
If you are still in need of people then I would be honoured to
volunteer!
<Indeed we are>
Thanks very much,
Simon
<Thank you for coming forward. If you would, please forward a
brief bio. for posting (w/ an image/likeness if you'd like as
well). The log-in for our webmail server is: XXXX
I look forward to your input. Cheers, Bob
Fenner>
Simon Trippick bio. 1/7/10
Hello to you all and thank you for welcoming me to the crew so
readily! Here is a quick bio of my fishy experience, but the
picture will have to wait for a bit until my wife gives the
necessary clearance! I hope this is ok!
I live in England, I am 33 years old and have kept fish since I
was 8.
My first tank was a freshwater 'community' set up that
included tetras, gouramis, mollies and a pair of convict cichlids
that we were assured would all 'get along just fine'. The
outcome was inevitable, but the convicts had babies and I was
hooked!
I kept various American cichlids over the years, took them with
me to university and back, all the while my tanks, and the
cichlids, just kept getting bigger and bigger. I then landed a
pretty decent job, bought a house and suddenly had space for a
six foot tank. It was then I moved into marines and with the
arrival of my Emperor Angelfish my love for the hobby really took
off! Combining amazing animals and their interactions, the
ability to 'tinker' continuously, build things, change
equipment and a near inexhaustible supply of reading material, as
well as the fact that there is something new to learn every day
means that it is never dull for me, or mundane, but always just
marvelous! Keeping fishes and corals and learning about them has
opened my eyes to what is happening to the world, and because of
it I am a fundraiser for the Marine Conservation Society. I do
not subscribe to some peoples thoughts that our hobby is bad for
the planet, rather that it is a means to educate people into
caring for it a lot more than they do right now.
Anyway, 5 years on and I've married the girl of my dreams and
sold my house, but I still have the six foot reef tank, only now
it's plumbed into two four foot tanks at the beginning of a
multi-habitat system that is my next project.
As far as answering questions is concerned I am most comfortable
with things in the reef department, but since I have always had a
large lionfish, my weakness there is small fishes because I have
never really kept them. I can also help out with fish health in
general if required, and I know a bit about cichlids as well. I
have helped out on a forum before and have just got back on there
after an absence, so I do have some experience answering fishy
questions. I hope I can do a fine job helping fishies and people
all over, and please don't hesitate to tell me if I'm
not!
Thanks again for welcoming me to the crew and I'm looking
forward to working with you all.
Simon
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Marine Conservation Society &
fundraising 4/15/10
This is a note of thanks to all who supported me in the recent
Bath Half Marathon, both fellow WWM crewmembers and readers/
posters alike! You sure are a generous lot, and in total I
managed to raise £301.00 for the Marine Conservation Society.
It did take me far longer than I wanted though, a colossal 2hrs
and 9 minutes, but I did manage to drag my weary legs & knees
around the final bend at last!
<All's well that ends well...>
Thanks again to you all, our planet certainly needs peoples such
as you! Simon.
<Thank you Simon. BobF>
Simon et ux Kim
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Please welcome Mike Van Bibber to the Crew
2/16/08 Hello again Bob, <Mike> I received the
payment, many thanks. Be assured that it will be used for more
aquarium "stuff" <I like the way you think> Also,
please find a donation notification in your inbox. <Uhh!>
On an unrelated note, if you ever need additional assistance
answering emails, I would be more than happy to help. I've
been in and out of this hobby for the last twenty-five years,
most of it in FW, bur I did have a SW tank years ago, and I set
up another one last year, which is a FOWLR containing mix of a
few easy inverts and a good deal of macroalgae. <!? Are you
coming forward to join the WWM Crew? Great news!> If you feel
I would be useful, I would be comfortable answering questions on
set-up, stocking, plumbing, electrical, chemistry\testing,
macroalgae, and some sponges. Lastly, I'm multi-lingual - I
could answer queries in English, German, or Russian. <Wowzah.
I barely speak English> Regards and thanks again, Mike
<Mike, please do send along a brief bio. for posting... and a
pic if you'd like. The URL for the WWM mailserver is: The
"Email Address": The password: I will make an in-folder
for you... MikeV And a bit re some conventions we use can be read
here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/WWMAdminSubWebIndex/crewsupwebmail.htm
And, thank you for sharing Mike... I assure you, this is a
vivacious, educational experience! Bob Fenner>
Hi Bob, I'm honored to join the Crew. Here is a brief bio.
I included a picture of my tank - I'll have to dig up a
picture of myself. If you don't mind, I will spend a day or
two 'poking" around to get the feel of things. Mike
<Certainly fine. And thank you again for sharing. BobF> I
was born and raised in Detroit, MI. I first got involved with the
aquarium hobby in 1978 when I bought a 10 gallon FW tank which I
successfully kept for eight years. In 1980, I tried my hand at a
20 gallon SW tank. Back then, at least in my area, a SW tank was
three steps removed from witchcraft as far as most pet stores
were concerned. After many failures, I was finally able to keep
two Damselfish alive for more than two weeks. I kept that tank
going for six years. After finishing college and joining the
military, I once again started a FW tank which I would tear down
set up every time Uncle Sam moved us around the country. I was
medically discharged from the military in 2002 and settled in
Melbourne FL. Since we had settled down, I started a 75 gallon FW
tank. What started as a FO tank has evolved into a planted tank
with schools of Rainbowfish. Two years ago, I wanted to have
another go at a SW tank. After hitting the books, I realized how
much had changed in 26 years. I spent the next year planning and
convincing my spouse. Finally in early 2008, I set up a 150
gallon FOWLR tank. I've since taken an interest in
macroalgae, and currently have about eight different types
growing in the tank, and one very happy and well fed Sailfin
Tang. I've been married to my very patient wife for almost 19
years (emphasis on very patient), and we have three children, 17,
16, and 14; all of whom have grown very attached to the
aquariums. We share the house with two large dogs and a Blue
Crowned Conure. I work as an Electrical\Controls Engineer for a
material handling company when I'm not playing with fish.
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Pictures 3/18/09
Hi Bob.
<Mike>
Finally found some pictures of myself.
xmas3 is my spouse and I, onemorefish is reflective of the
look I usually get when explaining why you cannot have 50
fish in a 10 gallon tank....
Regards
Mike
<Ah, good... will post! BobF>
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Gabe Walsh Update 2/23/17
Hi Bob-
Wanted to give you an update on why I'm not answering queries. Our show
opens this weekend and I have had a lot of class work to catch up on
since rehearsals are after school until 10 PM. I've been at school for
15 hours a day for the past two weeks :(
I should be able to catch up on school work faster once the show ends,
but I can't make any promises. I will be back to answering queries in
early March.
Cheers-
Gabe Walsh, WWM Crew
<No worries Gabe. As you may well be aware, life is a series of choices
(and compromises at times). Focus on your school work, activities mate.
Bob Fenner>
Return of the Gabester :) 9/19/17
Hi Bob!
<Hey Gabe!>
I think you saw the query I responded to earlier today, as it has been
posted. I'm back! I kind of informally took the summer off, as I picked
up another job and worked all but one day of the summer, trying to earn
money to afford fish!
<Heeee!>
Unfortunately minimum wage at two restaurants isn't enough to buy a
Centropyge boylei, but in time I will hopefully be able to afford one!
Anyways, I just wanted to let you know that I will be responding to
queries again when I can, but I can't make any promises as to how often
because I am trying to balance two jobs and junior year in high
school... I'll keep
you posted.
<School first of course>
Lastly, my family is going to Nassau in mid-October. I am going to do my
advanced open water certification dive and hopefully a shark dive.
<Great!>
Not sure if you are familiar with the Bahamas or not, but if there are
any notable dive sites that you think I should try out, let me know!
Cheers-
Gabe Walsh
<Yes; have been diving there in the Bahamas... For nostalgia sake, do
check out the various "James Bond" dive sites. Bob Fenner>
Re: Return of the Gabester :) 9/19/17
Bob-
Forgot about the Bond sites down there! I will try to request one of
them as the site for my wreck dive. Thanks for the info!
Cheers-
Gabe Walsh
<Bon voyageeeee! B>
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Matt Wandell
Well I just completed my BS in Marine Biology here at UC Davis. At
RDO I'm the Nanos forum moderator, and I have a lot of
experience with very small tanks (under 10 gallons) and their
design and equipment. I help maintain the marine tanks on campus at
UCD that are used for our undergraduate biology labs. These are
mostly local animals from the N.CA coast. I also run a tank
maintenance business here in Davis and have experience with larger
tropical tanks (in the 300 gallon range) as well. <A good mix of
experiences> I've kept all the common genera of corals and
fish in the trade at one point or another. I'm a big fan of
octopods and have kept 3 over the years. I think I can answer
questions of a biological/behavioral nature well. Admittedly
I'm a bit of a rookie when conversations turn to hardcore
chemistry and lighting issues. Hope this helps, Matt Wandell PS I
know virtually nothing about freshwater tanks. Just realized that
your site deals with that too :D |
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Craig's
Watson A little about myself. <Okay> I live on a small
farm on Harstine Island in the Puget Sound of Washington State with
my wife of twenty-five years, Stephanie. Our Daughter Elan is
twenty-two and is a Graduate of Washington State University with a
BA in Zoology. <Yikes... same as my undergrad. degree> I was
born in Van Nuys, California in 1955. I lived in Canoga Park, (now
West Hills) for twenty two years where I attended elementary
through High School, several years of College and a machinist
apprenticeship. My list of jobs, hobbies, interests and passions
reflects what I prefer to call my "Renaissance" style.
Others might describe this more like "doer of all, master of
none". As a kid I dug ponds with my friend Rick in his parents
backyard. We stocked it with Crappie, Blue Gill and Bullhead Cats
we caught at places like Reseda Park. This lead to more ponds at my
house and aquariums with blue gill, crappie and bullhead at Ricks
house. As a kid I also kept snakes, lizards, frogs, toads, horned
toads, Tiger Whip-tails, mice, rats, rabbits, pigeons, hawks, owls,
etc. My dear old Mother was known as "Noah" at the vet.
No kidding. <I believe it> I started keeping fish, Cichlids,
in the late 70's when undergravel filters, powerheads and
cartridge filters were introduced, with one or two interruptions
along the way. I raced bicycles, was a motorcycle mechanic for a
top ranked Motocross racer, been a bicycle mechanic, bicycle
distributor warehouseman, machinist, Tool and Die Maker,
maintenance machinist/welder/electrician/plumber for a major
abrasives firm, machined landing gear struts and wing webs for
Boeing jets, been a carpenter, a foreman, owned a Horticultural
business growing annual and perennial bedding plants, a mixed
specialty soils business, finish carpentry and cabinet work, AKC
Herding Trial Judge and Dog trainer. My involvement with dogs is
extensive. I served as Vice-president and as Director of the
Australian Cattle Dog Club of America, inc. <Oh, we have one of
these... Sydney... dissimilarly colored eyes...> for seven
years, was Vice-president for a regional club, founding President
of an AKC All-Breed Herding Club, wrote several sets of Bylaws and
Constitutions for all of the clubs, established a 501C, 3.
non-profit dog rescue corporation, and served as the ACDCA Delegate
to the 2000-2001 AKC Herding Advisory Committee. I have written
many articles on herding dogs, trialing and training, which have
been published in the AKC Gazette, The AKC Herdsman, Dog News, Dog
World, Ranch Dog Trainer, and several other publications. We still
board and train herding dogs and currently have thirteen Australian
Cattle Dogs and a small flock of sheep. <Yowzah! You must have a
lot of energy!> I am a PADI advanced open water diver with
rescue and underwater photography certifications. <Mmm, we may
have to find someone to take your place soon.. while you're out
dive/traveling with us...> I became re-addicted to fish keeping,
more specifically reef keeping, when my daughter returned from
college with a sick pleco and I was forced to go to the local fish
store for treatments. Boy had things changed since the first
undergravels and cartridges! First it was a simple little 20 gallon
acrylic. My daughter has it now. I am currently retrofitting one of
the greenhouses to mariculture while starting a rock, sand and
captive coral concern in the basement of my home that will relocate
to the greenhouses when ready. Right now I have a 40 gallon mixed
reef in the living room, a 55 SPS/LPS tank (Rick's old 55), a
250 gallon tiered system (60 refugium into 60 frag tank, into 100
gallon grow out, into 30 gallon sump), and several 200 gallon rock
curing/aragonite sand culture vats in the basement. <Neat.>
It is my hope that I can share my experience and knowledge to help
others have the fun, excitement, discovery, interaction and success
with their critters that I have enjoyed over the years. Craig
<Outstanding. Hope to meet you "in the flesh" someday
soon. And, ca-rack, you have a question waiting to be answered! Bob
Fenner.> |
Craig and one of his 13 dogs, Sassy |
Marvin VandeLinde joins the WWM Crew!
3/4/15
Bob,
I have enjoyed our discussions over the years in particular watching you help
the community through answering WWM. These days I find myself with much free
time and was interested in possibly helping your site in responses etc or how
you might see fit. The joy of helping for a portion of time sounds like a fun
task to have at hand these days.
<Will be FAB to have you with us Marv. Greatly edifying as you'll find.
<Ahh; I thank you for your participation. Am looking for your input in helping
others on WWM: Do send along a brief bio. and pic to post, and log-in when you
have time.
Our login:
https://XXX.safesecureweb.com/
Email address there in the tray:
[email protected]
PW: XXX
Some bits re responding here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/WWMAdminSubWebIndex/crewsupwebmail.htm
Feel free to express your personal views re better products, worse... of course.
The Net is semi-forever.
Welcome to our association BobF. >>
Talk to you soon,
Marvin VandeLinde |
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Christine Williams joins the WWM Crew
... am following up, hoping you were not joshing re possibly
helping on WWM... and re the poss. of your joining some of the
Crew ahead of the ORCA event: http://www.o-r-c-a.com/modules.php?name=GCalendar&file=viewday&y=2009&m=7&d=11&e=4
Do please make it known if you're interested! We're still
undecided whether to dive/stay about the W. Palm Beach area or
maybe head down to Pennekamp/Key Largo or... Maybe for three-four
days of diving in front of the time of the event.
What say you?
BobF
Yes, I'd be happy to help out on WWM, just putting together a
bio. Here's something CTARS is using http://www.ctars.org/default.aspx?uc=nextMeeting .
Areas of interest? Likely fish diseases (always a needed thing),
but I can write about marine microbial ecology (because we know
EVERYONE finds that fascinating--not) and consequent nutrient
cycling, micro and macroalgae, particularly phyto culture, fish
and invert immunology, probiotics in marine systems, and the odd
industrial or commercial uses of aquarium species. And seahorses.
:) Right now at work I'm working on developing skin care
ingredients (treatments, UV protectors, pigments) from marine or
marine biotransformed raw materials, at home I'm rebuilding a
few systems--all low-tech, little-equipment balanced
ecosystems.
<Yay!....
I'll make an in-folder for you...
"Christine">
Diving? As long as you don't mind a dive neophyte coming
along I'd love to if it's a shortish trip (and by
neophyte I mean I truly will be open to any and all advice and
suggestions on equipment etc).
<Am always willing to chat re>
Send me more info as you get it and I'll see fi I can get
everything in order to go.
<Will definitely do so>
Are you all attending the conference as well?
<Yes, as far as I know>
Also switching to my home email address for easier access--thanks
everyone.
Christine Williams Bio
The serious:
Christine Williams is an avid hobbyist and seahorse keeper who,
when not doing water changes, works as an industrial marine
microbiologist. Currently she balances leading her laboratory
team in the search for marine-derived biologically active
molecules, and pursuing a PhD in marine biology at Stony Brook
University's School of Marine and Atmospheric Science. Prior
to joining the industrial world, she spent significant time in
the veterinary sciences including clinical laboratory
diagnostics, exotic animal husbandry, and emergency and critical
care. Her aquarium interests cover a wide range with special
focus given to macroalgae and plankton, the breeding and
reproduction of aquarium specimens, piscine and invertebrate
immunology, and the treatment of ailing fish. Christine actively
mentors hobbyists on diagnostic pathology and lectures
internationally on subjects of aquatic science, and has the
pleasure of serving as a moderator for the Marine and Ornamental
Fish and Invertebrate Breeders forum.
The not very serious:
Christine Williams started keeping fish while she was still a
fetus. While the aqueous environment did lend itself to the
hobby, it limited her to freshwater species, and so she decided
to be born several weeks early. Through sign language she
demanded that her parents convert her crib into a reef aquarium
and thus started her illustrious career in marine ornamentals.
After completing her studies in biochemistry and molecular
microbiology she went to work at Animal ER where unfortunately
she was not filmed for the Animal Planet channel (though her feet
did make a cameo during a rescue segment). Currently she is the
head of the Industrial marine Microbiology team for her division
of a very large international chemical company, where she spends
her days mixing chemicals, microorganisms and plankton together
and seeing if they will A) explode, B) glow in the dark, or C)
make a good salsa. In order to further her skills she is also a
PhD student at Stony Brook University's School of Marine and
Atmospheric Science. She has lectured and given workshops on fish
diseases and treatment techniques, seahorse keeping and breeding,
marine microbiology, and algal culture and bioprospecting in the
US and abroad.
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