I want a tang

I keep Tangs.

I started with a 90 and in a matter of weeks I realized that I was completely taken by three things in this hobby. Propagating corals, keeping and growing Angels and keeping and growing Tangs.

I learned that growing corals and raising Angels were incompatible so I gave up on the idea of keeping Angels. I didn't, as so many hobbyists have tried, start researching which Dwarf Angels are least likely to graze on my corals. I just gave up on Angels.

I learned that raising Tangs in a 90 was like living with a Great Dane in a 900 foot apartment. Doable, but not all that great for either me or the dog. I really didn't want to give up on the idea of keeping Tangs so I came to the conclusion I needed a bigger tank. So I built a 450 and dream my dreams of the 2100 I'd like to someday have but I have a lot of learning yet to do.

Since then I've kept fourteen different species of these interesting fish and learned a bit about them. I've learned that if a reference says a fish is aggressive you should trust that the author isn't an idiot. This doesn't mean that if you went through 50 Sohals you couldn't find a single peaceful one but why kill 49 to find the one? (and they're every bit as impressive looking as the texts say)

Your LFS may display a Mata Tang in a 20 while they're trying to sell it but it's a very stressful environment and Tangs that are peaceful in large tanks can get downright nasty in too crowded an environment.

So if you want to keep a Tang or even multiple Tangs please remember either the Great Dane or a lifer in a 6x9 cell in Leavenworth.
 
I keep Tangs.

I started with a 90 and in a matter of weeks I realized that I was completely taken by three things in this hobby. Propagating corals, keeping and growing Angels and keeping and growing Tangs.

I learned that growing corals and raising Angels were incompatible so I gave up on the idea of keeping Angels. I didn't, as so many hobbyists have tried, start researching which Dwarf Angels are least likely to graze on my corals. I just gave up on Angels.

I learned that raising Tangs in a 90 was like living with a Great Dane in a 900 foot apartment. Doable, but not all that great for either me or the dog. I really didn't want to give up on the idea of keeping Tangs so I came to the conclusion I needed a bigger tank. So I built a 450 and dream my dreams of the 2100 I'd like to someday have but I have a lot of learning yet to do.

Since then I've kept fourteen different species of these interesting fish and learned a bit about them. I've learned that if a reference says a fish is aggressive you should trust that the author isn't an idiot. This doesn't mean that if you went through 50 Sohals you couldn't find a single peaceful one but why kill 49 to find the one? (and they're every bit as impressive looking as the texts say)

Your LFS may display a Mata Tang in a 20 while they're trying to sell it but it's a very stressful environment and Tangs that are peaceful in large tanks can get downright nasty in too crowded an environment.

So if you want to keep a Tang or even multiple Tangs please remember either the Great Dane or a lifer in a 6x9 cell in Leavenworth.

Lol i love your examples thank you for sharing your experience



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alright guys your point has been made, and i appreciate those of you who weren't demeaning about it. Im here to learn..

Ive seen this topic come up so many times. And the fact is people are very stern about this on here....why? Cause most that want a tang really dont listen and they continue to justify "Well Ill find it a bigger home" or "Im getting a bigger tank"

Just go with what you got, and make decisions based on what you have and just go under the expectation that you will keep it forever. I like the Yellow eye kole tangs myself.
 
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