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gary-c

gary-c

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  • Yes, you need to put a piece of bogwood or any sinking wood in the tank for the bristlenose to chew on. Bristlenoses, and many other plecos, like to chew on chunks of wood. When stomach content analyses are done on wild plecos, some of them have the…
  • Yes, you need to put a piece of bogwood or any sinking wood in the tank for the bristlenose to chew on. Bristlenoses, and many other plecos, like to chew on chunks of wood. When stomach content analyses are done on wild plecos, some of them have the…
  • Cigars in general are 100% tobacco. However, tobacco companies are not required to label products with additives or say what additives are used. Very few potential additives are likely to be as toxic as tobacco itself, however.
  • How about Freya, the Nordic Goddess of Love? A Norse goddess seems appropriate for a husky name.
  • How about Freya, the Nordic Goddess of Love? A Norse goddess seems appropriate for a husky name.
  • They can potentially breed as often as every couple of days if they are in really good condition. They have hundreds of tiny eggs at each spawning-- I've never counted exactly how many there are. Yes, the fry can definitely be sucked into the filt…
  • Interestingly, I once knew of a man whose first name was "Unique." No one can deny that his is a unique name.
  • Interestingly, I once knew of a man whose first name was "Unique." No one can deny that his is a unique name.
  • They are both mountainous, and both are landlocked. Yes, I'd say there are a lot of similarities, purely in terms of topography. The human histories, demographics, and cultures of the two places are very different, of course.
  • In Spanish, it's Hah- vee- AIR. (It's a Spanish, or more properly Basque, name.) The "X" is pronounced like a slightly palatized "H." The same name can be spelled "Javier," with the same pronunciation. But English …
  • In Spanish, it's Hah- vee- AIR. (It's a Spanish, or more properly Basque, name.) The "X" is pronounced like a slightly palatized "H." The same name can be spelled "Javier," with the same pronunciation. But English …
  • They won't die if you don't keep them in groups, but 20 gallons is rather small for even one zebra cichlid (Metriaclima zebra). I'm sure it's been done before, though.
  • Paralegals do all the heavy lifting, while lawyers take the credit. To be a good paralegal, you primarily need to be good with words and at analyzing texts and writing, so English, social studies, and history would be good high school subjects to t…
  • Paralegals do all the heavy lifting, while lawyers take the credit. To be a good paralegal, you primarily need to be good with words and at analyzing texts and writing, so English, social studies, and history would be good high school subjects to t…
  • Paralegals do all the heavy lifting, while lawyers take the credit. To be a good paralegal, you primarily need to be good with words and at analyzing texts and writing, so English, social studies, and history would be good high school subjects to t…
  • They won't die if you don't keep them in groups, but 20 gallons is rather small for even one zebra cichlid (Metriaclima zebra). I'm sure it's been done before, though.
  • They won't die if you don't keep them in groups, but 20 gallons is rather small for even one zebra cichlid (Metriaclima zebra). I'm sure it's been done before, though.
  • In Spanish, it's Hah- vee- AIR. (It's a Spanish, or more properly Basque, name.) The "X" is pronounced like a slightly palatized "H." The same name can be spelled "Javier," with the same pronunciation. But English …
  • In Spanish, it's Hah- vee- AIR. (It's a Spanish, or more properly Basque, name.) The "X" is pronounced like a slightly palatized "H." The same name can be spelled "Javier," with the same pronunciation. But English …
  • They are both mountainous, and both are landlocked. Yes, I'd say there are a lot of similarities, purely in terms of topography. The human histories, demographics, and cultures of the two places are very different, of course.
  • Interestingly, I once knew of a man whose first name was "Unique." No one can deny that his is a unique name.
  • Interestingly, I once knew of a man whose first name was "Unique." No one can deny that his is a unique name.
  • Interestingly, I once knew of a man whose first name was "Unique." No one can deny that his is a unique name.
  • Interestingly, I once knew of a man whose first name was "Unique." No one can deny that his is a unique name.
  • Interestingly, I once knew of a man whose first name was "Unique." No one can deny that his is a unique name.
  • They can potentially breed as often as every couple of days if they are in really good condition. They have hundreds of tiny eggs at each spawning-- I've never counted exactly how many there are. Yes, the fry can definitely be sucked into the filt…
  • They can potentially breed as often as every couple of days if they are in really good condition. They have hundreds of tiny eggs at each spawning-- I've never counted exactly how many there are. Yes, the fry can definitely be sucked into the filt…
  • They can potentially breed as often as every couple of days if they are in really good condition. They have hundreds of tiny eggs at each spawning-- I've never counted exactly how many there are. Yes, the fry can definitely be sucked into the filt…
  • They can potentially breed as often as every couple of days if they are in really good condition. They have hundreds of tiny eggs at each spawning-- I've never counted exactly how many there are. Yes, the fry can definitely be sucked into the filt…
  • How about Freya, the Nordic Goddess of Love? A Norse goddess seems appropriate for a husky name.