
Originally Posted by
timebomb

Originally Posted by
RonWill
* I wonder if we can reach a larger target audience by introducing and selling killifishes from the club's booth at such aquatic shows. If you can't beat 'em, join 'em.
Don't even think about it, Ronnie. As far as I know, the rent for a booth in Aquarama is in the region of thousands of dollars. How are we going to make a profit? Even if we're not looking for profits, there's no way we can sell enough Killies to cover the rent.
Wright thinks by forming a club we can get more folks into Killifish. I disagree. The culture here is different from countries in the West. In Singapore, clubs offer little benefits as fish shops are abundant. In countries like the USA, a club is very useful because it can help a hobbyist get what he can't find in the fish shops. That is, if he's even near a fish shop in the first place.
The fact that clubs have little to offer...
I cannot argue the cultural differences, but right here is where we come apart on perceptions.
Raising killifish, like aquatic gardening, is a complex and highly technical hobby, when compared to the goldfish or guppy in a bowl that most folks consider to be serious aquatic involvement. Stores are utterly incapable of supporting either the planted aquarium or serious killifish involvement, in SG or here. [BTW, we have two fish shops in our tiny town, but neither are worth a visit. Who said they aren't abundant, here?]
Historically, the "kitchen breeders" of Europe pulled the hobby through the destruction of WW II by forming clannish local groups to share knowledge and fish. They were very generous with that knowledge, after the war, and serious correspondence got that technology transferred to hobbyists in the new world.
When I first tried to breed N. guentheri, in about 1958, we had no local or national clubs (AKA was formed at least 4 years later) and the San Francisco Aquarium Society plus academics at Stanford and Berserkely were our only sources of information. Needless to say, that information was mostly wrong and success wasn't high.
The internet and this forum have given you a kick start that I would have loved to have in 1958, but you still don't provide the infrastructure that I found in BAKA when I returned to killies after starting a family and company in the early '60s. In 1990 or thereabouts, the BAKA attendance was running about 40 per meeting, in the smelly old basement of the Hayward Round-Table Pizza parlor.
A club can provide a newsletter (dead-tree or on-line is little difference any more) that includes a good writeup on upcoming meetings, and minutes of past meetings. Much of the technical content of the hobby is passed around as personal observations and fishroom physical visits, and a core of succeeding breeders is essential to getting big enough to need a meeting room to handle the crowd. My guess is that critical mass is about 10-12 very active breeders, of which at least 6-8 bring fish to every auction.
BAKA recently fell way below that threshold, and had to back off to meeting every three months. Recent regrowth has now forced the meetings to every other month, and it will be monthly again as soon as enough fish and volunteers show up to allow it.
The club could easily have died if a few staunch volunteers had not hung in there and dragged it through the toughest times. [All the best breeders got cancer or moved away at the same time -- just bad luck.]

Originally Posted by
timebomb
snip...I've always been against the idea of forming a club. I still am. But I would give my full support to anyone who's gungho enough to do it. Just don't ask me to be President or anything like that. My wife will kill me if she finds out I'm going to be a committee member of any fish club.
The fact of the matter is - There are many causes worth fighting for and many ideals are worth the sacrifice in time and effort but forming a fish club isn't one of them. Not in my book, anyway. If I'm going to be President, I would rather be President of Singapore. If only those damn buggers allow me to contest
Loh K L
You would have my vote, KL, if those same buggers would let me vote, there.
Unfortunately, I don't think you would like the job that much.
Starting a club is easier than you think. Keeping it going (as recently happened with BAKA) is another matter. It is a matter of getting an organization that works and then keeping it on track -- all that is really very little work.
We had the new officer each year be the treasurer. That way, even a newby was forced to get to know all the members as dues, auction results, etc. were tabulated.
Each officer (except a permanent recording sec.) was then promoted annually. Treas. went to VP (who organized meetings and auctions), and VP became Pres. (who's only real function was to preside at meetings and appoint committees). The Pres. became Chairperson (past-president, who advised the pres and presided over board meetings when he chose to call them).
The gradual accumulation of experience meant the functions were well served. The permanent (more-or-less) Secretary provided glue to keep knowledge of past actions before the board and guidance to the current pres. as to what works and what doesn't. [KL would be great at this job!]
Only one new officer needed to be found each year by the nominating committee (unless others were required to withdraw).
It really is that simple, and has been proven to work. I don't see any reason cultural differences cannot be accomodated. Certainly the hobbyists of basically Sociocratic Europe and almost-Libertarian US have no trouble overcoming their deep sociological differences. 
I think we have to recognize that the very reasons that killies aren't a big commercial success is why we need to provide some underpinnings that the commercial world easily provides to commodity fish, like chicklets tetras and livebearers. Local and national clubs have been the solution in Europe and in N. America. There are just too many fun species, and too many diverse motivations (specializations) for the commercial shops to provide the kind of support that a succesful hobby needs to flourish.
I love to argue, and KL makes it soooo easy! 
Wright[/i]
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