Love of the hobby

Paul B

Premium Member
Getting into this hobby was easy for me. My family owned a seafood business and I grew up playing with dead fish so it was natural for me to start a tank. Of course at 2 or 3 years old I needed a little help.
On fridays my Dad would bring me to the Fulton Fish Market in Manhattan which was the place that supplied seafood for all of New York.
The place was huge and the ships would dock there and the fish would be off loaded right into the street. There would also be huge sea turtles that were (unfortunately) destined to become soup.
Anyway, every once in a while in that mountain of fish you would find some small animal still alive like a crab, shrimp or even a seahorse.
My Dad would let me take those animals home and put them in some water. I only had fresh water so nothing lived more than a few hours but at least I got a taste of how amazing it was to actually take a living piece of the ocean and transport it to my home where I would stay up all night watching and probably trying to feed it.
I had more luck with the freshwater animals like catfish, eels and diamond back terripins. At least I could keep those animals alive.
In those days even a lot of the common freshwater fish we have now were not for sale.
I remember my facination when ever I would go to an aquarium store and see something new. Fish were originally sold in toy stores and called "toy fish"
There were no strictly aquarium stores because even the freshwater hobby was not common before WW2.
There were also no plastic bags so fish came in those little cardboard containers that Chinese take out places sell rice in.
When saltwater fish came out in 1971 I was in total awe and the only fish were blue devils. Imagine seeing a blue devil when for my entire life the only blue fish I ever saw was a blue gourami or a neon tetra. Blue devils blew my mind and I had to have them.
I would sit for hours starring at them just as I did when I was a todler looking at a dying crab in a glass of fresh water.
To this day I am still facinated by anything from the sea, especially something that I have never seen before. Thats the main reason I started SCUBA diving, that and finding lobsters. Now, at my age I have seen just about everything you can see related to the hobby but I still frequent stores in the hope I will find something new.
In a store I don't look at the dozens of yellow tangs, the schools of surgeon fish or the angels, I look behind the rocks and in sumps for the rare specimin that came in with other things and no one knows exactly what to call it. That is what I am looking for.
I have a few fish in my tank now that I don't know what they are and they are my favorites.
I am even more facinated by crustaceans. I put on my magnifying glasses and check out the shellfish (yes I look very wierd, it's a good thing I am married because this behaviour does not attract a lot of supermodels)
Hermit crabs are extreamly cool, they go to great lengths to get to obscure places looking for food even though they would probably do better just sitting on the bottom.
They hang up side down and seem to be struggling just to stay put. But I can see where they are coming from, we humans scale mountains just for the fun of it and do wierd things to attract a mate. They are such facinating creatures and so much more advanced than we are in certain traits.
I still have no idea how they find food but they find it all and never make a mistake. I have a bunch of them, I don't know how many but if I drop in a few pellets or a piece of clam and I see it on the gravel, in about 10 seconds I see all the hermit crabs change direction and head for the food. It will most likely be gone when they get there but how do thay do it? I doubt they see very well and the water in the tank is swirling all over the place. How do they know what direction it is? It goes right over my head and this is the stuff that keps me up at night.
I am amazed by all of this stuff. Why don't fish crash into the glass? It's their lateral line system but imagine having a radar system like that. A school of tangs can instantly dive into a stand of acropora coral and not one of those fish will get a scratch.
Maybe it's me but I love this stuff.
How do you people feel about this hobby? :beer:
 
One fun thing about this hobby. I never stop learning... I am always studying something.
 
I agree completely. To me Nassarius snails blow me away, how they sense the difference between living tissue and dead tissue is amazing and can hone in on it with speed.

Once people stop stressing out over their tank and learn to enjoy it, it is truly an amazing thing. The variety of life and how it intermingles is fascinating. Nine years of this hobby and the learning is really just beginning. I am thankful for the people who take time out of their lives to come here and share their experience.
 
I first became interested in this hobby in 1965 or so, when I first visited my "uncles" (friends of my parents) house in Columbus, Ohio. As far as I know, he was the first scuba instructor/dive shop owner in the area. He had a small tank in the living room with a clowfish or two and a coral banded shrimp. It was as cool as it gets (for a 5 year old, at least) Many years went by, but it was always on my mind. In the mid 1980's, I got scuba certified, and started to date the owner of a LFS specializing in marine. That pretty much sealed my fate, as it were. I have had multiple tanks ever since, and have kept pretty much everything available at one point or another. I can spend hours just looking into my refugium, trying to find something new. Most times I can. My wife (not the lfs owner, but that is a different story for a different time and place (the lounge???) did not really share my enthusiasm at first. Now that she is PADI certified as well, and has seen some of wht there is to see out there, I have to drag her out of the LFS so she does not spend the mortgage $$$. I have learned so much about so many things over the years - chemistry, lighting, plumbing, carpentry, electrical, biology, the list goes on. Certainly one of the better things I've ever chosen to do.
 
Great post!

I remember when I first got my fascination for the hobby, when I was around 8 my mom always went the same laundry mat and there was a fish store right next door. She would do laundry and I would be nExt door the whole time the lfs would always let me feed the fish and help out around the place I loved it! I would spend hours in there just staring at the live rock pointing out little things on it! Wasn't to far later I started my first tank all uphill or downhill from there however u want to look at it
 
I grew up with all things fish, my father is a fisherman and i caught my first fish as aa four year old.
We had an aquarium until i was five and behind our house ran a little creek.
Me and my brother would often take out the old aquarium and go down to the creek and catch critters and study them for hours..
I love sitting at night and look into a reef tank, i love all the diversity..
 
I grew up playing with dead fish so it was natural for me to start a tank

Don't know why, but this made me laugh.

I got into the hobby about 10 years ago, I'd always wanted a reef tank but never had the funds. I've always been interested in reefs, I think because when I was a young'un I lived overseas and our family vacations were to places like Australia, Bali, etc. We'd do a lot of snorkeling and I was always amazed at the life on a reef. Even then I would pick up on the little interactions of all the life on the reef and it would amaze me. I was always the last one out of the water on snorkeling trips and a few times I had to be "rescued" because I had drifted too far away because I was just so caught up in the underwater world. I don't have the means now to get back to those places but I do have the means for a reef tank so that I can see a small part of the intermingling of life forms on a reef.
 
I got in after leaving the Marines in the mid 80's. I got into diving while stationed at KMCAS in Hawaii, and also got to dive the GBR on a cruse to Australia. Just kinda happened when I got out and moved to western Pa, and met a really young Anthony Calfo. The store he worked in was about half a mile from my house. My wallet went downhill from there.
 
i got into the hobby about 15 years ago...i always loved aquariums...as a kid my dad had a whole wall in the basement had about 15 tanks built in and backing onto the laundry room...he had everything in there eels, rays, arowannas(sp), guppies, piranhas, goldfish...etc, it was like walking into a fish store every day....he had countless books in a builtin bookcase beside the tanks...he never kept any marine tanks, and only had one book on the subject...i would stare at that book day in and day out...dreaming of owning a lionfish or a mandarin goby...naturally having stared at tanks full of freshwater fish my whole life i was compelled to start a marine tank...i tried and failed miserably...put it on the back burner and just kept reading...all through university i would catch myself reading and looking at marine books instead of studying for midterms on romanesque architecture or geometry...

now having my own place, and a not so understanding wife i am destine to have nano tanks but still dream of one day having a larger tank...i sit up till 1 in the morning staring into my5 gallon tank looking for signs of new life, and i am very happy to say i find something new everyday...

you're never too old to start learning, similarly, you're only to old to stop learning when you dead...i encourage everyone i know to get a tank and do some research, and although you cant pet your fish or inverts, the way they interact with you is like no other pet...the things you learn along the way are incredible...and the enjoyment received by so many who look into my tank is worth every bit of time and effort i have to put into it..
 
Back
Top