Thai food scores well with the locals here. It caters to our general liking for spicy stuff. I think being a Singaporean enables me to enjoy a wide spectrum of foods; anything from pungent-smelling durians, tongue-frying chillis to cheesy pastas
Ans: You throw them back in jail.:) For nearly a week now, Patches and Tinny had been dropping a few scales, and we couldn’t figure out the reason why. Their eating patterns had not changed, water parameters and quality were
This food blog is doing wonders to our meal times. OK so maybe no one besides our bud in Missouri reads this, that the both of us have a Dining in Singapore blog on netsphere has led us to sampling
… in that they sometimes just fight and attack each other viciously. That’s essentially what happened in our “prison cell” tank. The three fellows: Nibbler, Stripes and Aura initially existed pretty peacefully for a few months. Since the last few
The pictures turned out quite alright, which is surely a good testimony to the skill of our photographer at Precious Moments, Tien Sheng. In fact, they turned out better than either of us had expected – so much so that
The three Leopards seem to enjoy huddling together in the corner of the tank, only venturing out when they sense food. They’ve taken a liking for the same type of food as the or Peppered cousins in the large tank
We haven’t been seeing Otto much for nearly a week now, and we suspected that he was most likely hiding somewhere in the tank and only appearing when the lights were off. However, several days ago when Otto finally did
The last of the three critters we picked up more than a week ago. This fellow is the easiest to tell from a glance, since his entire dorsal fin is black in colouration:
Here’s Halffin, the second of the three Leopards in the small tank. Like the other two of his brethen, the Leopards are distinguished by their colouration on their dorsal fin. This little fellow is so-named because his mark is, well,
The three leopard cories seem to have adjusted nicely into the small tank, although a week after their introduction they still seem pretty nervous about any sort of noise or movement near the tank. Many a time they would quickly
One of the most fasinacting aspects of keeping these critters is how they take to different types of food. Not surprisingly, most of the fishes we have in our two tanks have different preferences for what they eat, and in
The posts several days ago identified the three Peppered Corys we’ve got. Here’s a picture that should help one tell Squint apart from Big Eye: The critter in the foreground – with the slightly larger eyes – is Big Eye,
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