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Clickbait? Nah fam this *OEM* bait!! For each RANT video, you get 1 equal & opposite FISH video! 😊

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  1. Hey Louis- I know this comment is kinda late, but you might want to check out GE's 'Cync' lighting products. To use the RGB functionality on any of their bulbs, you have to agree to a forced arbitration clause. For a light bulb. Just bought them and now I am going to return them as soon as possible.

  2. The plants that you plan on adding to the pond is both protection for the baby fish from the bigger gold fish (goldfish are accidental cannibals) and food. The baby fish doesn't need any of your fish food until it's much bigger.

    Adding a handful of extra plants to your pond is indeed the right move for the little ones.

    P.S Catfish and other "bottom feeder" fish eat primarily eat algae. Most of them are tropical fish so if you want one mention that you want to put the fish into a pond, the pet shop probably has some that are right for your pond.

  3. I'm looking to replace the Roku OS on my TCL Tv with something else, but every source I find online says I can't. Could I just remove the Roku infected hardware entirely and replace it with open source things?

  4. They plants you have in pond, you can just take cuttings from tie them to a pebble and throw them back into the pond and they will fill out on their own they grow really fast.

  5. I kind of like how your topic divergence still, somehow ended up in my interest sphere. For plants of a given species that can grow either submerged or immersed, they will usually grow faster immersed due to what gardeners call the 'aerial advantage'. They can absorb CO2 through their leaves easier in the air than under water.
    Hobbyist fish breeders notice that both plants and soil being present in a system increase fry yields of various fresh water fish species, even when comparing systems with no fry predators. It's understood that plants and soil introduce and breed micro flora & fauna that help feed fry during their early days. While professional koi breeders use synthetic, plant-like fixtures to catch the parents' adhesive eggs, I suspect they are also more likely to spawn when they have access to something plant-like in texture and appearance.
    Adult koi will ALWAYS eat their babies if the fry aren't too well hidden for them to bother!

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