Saturday, August 1, 2015
Friday, July 17, 2015
Sunday, July 12, 2015
Wednesday, June 24, 2015
Conclusion of 2015 spawning
All of my fry tanks are full and I am satisfied. The first 4 batches show incredible promise and I'm about to cull the last 2 batches for the first time. Once I can get all these fry into the bbr stage my life will get much easier.
results of spawn 1:
results of spawn 1:
Monday, May 11, 2015
Spawn 4 of 2015
This spawn is the first 'natural' spawn of the year, whereas my earlier spawns have been influenced by placing heaters in the ponds. 3 girls made a boat-load of eggs this morning. There was a large weather system that passed last night also. This is an interesting and important spawn. This group is a secondary line of my Oishi crosses, having been produced with a different mother than the primary Oishi crosses. This line has balanced bodies, powerful movement and they are strong hibernators. My hope is that keeping this parallel line will give me the best possible situation when outcrosses are needed a few years down the road.
Sunday, May 10, 2015
Yellow Eggs
On May 8th I took a spawn from an Oishi Cross female. On May 9th I took spawns from two Oishi females. So that makes 5 different Oishi cross females combined with 4 powerful Oishi cross males so far this year. Last year I held off on working with my Oishi crosses to allow the females to become full oya and I think my patience is paying off this season by giving me a strong focus & direction.
This photo is of the eggs from 11 am on May 9th. Notice the strong yellow color of the eggs. These eggs have been held by the mother for too long. Something happened that caused her to not release the eggs awhile ago. Notice the good separation & dispersion of the eggs. There is one further stage the eggs could reach if the mother held them even longer: clumping. Only once in 2012 have I observed clumped eggs and the fertility rate was decent. So I will let these eggs develop and keep my fingers crossed.
Update: 8-8-15
I was wrong, after having watched this female all year I now have the position that she simply makes yellow eggs. I came to this conclusion after observing a regular spawning routine that showed yellow eggs every time. Wow, didn't see that one coming.
This photo is of the eggs from 11 am on May 9th. Notice the strong yellow color of the eggs. These eggs have been held by the mother for too long. Something happened that caused her to not release the eggs awhile ago. Notice the good separation & dispersion of the eggs. There is one further stage the eggs could reach if the mother held them even longer: clumping. Only once in 2012 have I observed clumped eggs and the fertility rate was decent. So I will let these eggs develop and keep my fingers crossed.
Update: 8-8-15
I was wrong, after having watched this female all year I now have the position that she simply makes yellow eggs. I came to this conclusion after observing a regular spawning routine that showed yellow eggs every time. Wow, didn't see that one coming.
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