About Me

My name is Sebastian Grant, I keep and have worked with a huge diversity of species, and yes I know how lucky I am! Here in my short video's and writings I will try to convey how I've kept some of the animals I have kept mainly at home but also at work over the years. I will try and be honest about what I've done. On how I’ve kept things both at home at professionally and what’s gone wrong. It has long been a belief of mine that many captive animals survive in spite of what we do, rather than because of it. Here's how and why I've messed up or succeeded. The videos are mainly from my YouTube channel, SebastiansAnimals (catchy huh?). I would like to state that the opinions expressed in this blog are my own and not in any way meant to be taken as the views of anyone else I may mention in these ramblings. Sebastian. March 2012. Main photo by Jane Hallam.

Wednesday 13 June 2012

Invert update 2 (and other news).


Well the original draft of this started with “Presently all doing well at Grant Towers”…. But, as you’d expect of me, things are going downhill.

 The Acromyrmex octospinosus have got alates again, not sure why this is happening but I’m not sure anyone knows. Maybe once it starts it is an on-going problem?  They only seem to be in the new nest chamber, so I could strip it down and not risk killing the queen, but I will try to be less invasive and offer more fruit and early morning checks to catch them out and about (and then murder them).

“The weavers Oecophila are doing well”, I’d written… But, maybe I shouldn’t write a draft but just post straight away. I had thought they were starting to expand with one large nest and what looks like a smaller satellite nest, but then I found the queen outside the nest surrounded by workers. The next day the same, and then she was wandering around on her own.  Not good.
                                                                              
I have posted a question on the Antstore forum
So will hopefully get an answer to why this may be.

My Catalaphyllia jardinei is looking a tad ropey the last week or so, it’s in a medium flow area in a heavily fed tank and I’d dropped off the feeding schedule lately.  A classic mistake with many corals when they start to do well, you ignore them, then they crash.
I’ve moved it into a smaller, shallower tank with more light that’s easier to access and will feed it daily so hopefully will see some improvement soon.  I really can’t kill this, it’s one of the corals that seem to do well but aren’t bred, just collected from the wild. BUT, although it’s easy to say you should only buy captive bred, this offers nothing financially to the countries concerned with trying to maintain their reefs. How much can they care about long term solutions when we take their environmental property and make money out of it instead of paying a little more and encouraging proper management of the reef?

If you enter “biopiracy” into a search engine it will come up with lots of things about big pharmaceutical companies taking plants from the rain forest and we all think they’re very naughty, but we rarely mention corals.
(Ok, let’s ignore that the corals and fish are flown over in tiny bags of heavy water…)

On a more positive note
I was also given another Polistes colony. 
                                                                              
These are housed in the same plastic tub but this time with no furniture. This species is doing well in other collections in more basic containers so I will mimic this for now.
The initial move was a pain as I had hoped to copy what I’d seen and stick the nest to the walls with gaffer tape. However the nest didn’t stick to the ropey old tape and it fell off. I then went back to super glue.
I will try not to kill these too quickly… (Maybe the person who gave me them just doesn’t like wasps and knows that I AM pest control……)

Although not invert’s I must mention Neoceratodus forsteri, the Australian lungfish, this species has captivated me since I knew how unique, how hard to come by and how expensive they were*. Stay tuned to hear more. Don’t touch that dial…
*Do you see a pattern emerging?

Friday 1 June 2012

Helicops angulatus, feeding a group together.


Helicops angulatus, feeding a group together.

At first I thought feeding these snakes together would be a problem, I had thought it may lead to animals not getting enough food, getting bitten or even the smaller animals being eaten.
However I have now tried this a few times and found it very easy. (If you do read any of my posts, you’ll see I’m wrong quite a bit…..)
                  Even the biggest snake which was in slough didn’t attempt to bother the others.                               
In these clips I used a mix of defrosted lance fish (probably Ammodytes tobianus) and defrosted Amblypharyngodon mola, these I purchase from my local Bangladeshi store.*          
                          
I put in a lot of food while keeping some back in case I need to separate animals if aggression arises or to target feed if extra feeding may be needed.

Although the lancefish are marine/brackish I have used them as they are only a small part of the diet and to help bulk up the amount of food offered to help defuse possible aggression. 

*These shops sell a huge range of fish including many fresh water species. Many are wild caught, and all the ones I’ve checked are listed as of least concern on fishbase (http://www.fishbase.org/search.php ) but they do sell lots of Pangasius and Clarias, these will be farmed with all the associated problems this can bring. The fish are also packed in large blocks of water = water miles :(