Great content as always Ricky will be following this grow out one of my recent favourites i do like to grow my Koi on so invaluable info for me learning about these young koi and Great to see you smashing it in Japan with you private small collection 👌👍👏😂🤣
Great explanation! A big blue and red asagi is something special. Great to see these grow and develop. I am really happy that i found out about your channel!
I love a good Asagi, got to be one of my favourites👌another great grow out project that I will be following great interest, keep it up fellas, these series an element of koi keeping we just dont get to see usually 👍
Asagis are my number 1 favorite koi variety. Currently, I have 3 in my pond: 2 plain narumi asagis (one each from Hosokai and Oya), and 1 ginrin narumi (from Yamaju). When it comes to selecting tosai asagi, I also stick to the general rule of selecting specimens with very light blue color (usually almost white), milky white snouts, and the motokuro (pectoral fin pattern) being the only orange part of the body. With that said, my experience with Oya's asagis is that they generally remain light to medium blue in color all throughout and the relative amounts of orange they have either remains the same or increases only moderately. I have had some Oya asagis in the past 10 years that actually lost orange as they aged (with the motokuro's orange color receding into small, paddle-like forms). In contrast to your preference, I actually prefer bluish-white tosai with fully orange pectoral fins (even if they lack and/or will not develop orange in all other parts of their bodies, so long as it minimizes the probability of the motokuro being drastically reduced and any stray orange will appear in the blue netting pattern). I'm not sure if that was mostly due to their genetics or if it's due to having soft water in my home pond (in addition to the tropical climate we have here in the Philippines).
Love watching these videos I learn so much 👍
Awesome, thank you!
Great content as always Ricky will be following this grow out one of my recent favourites i do like to grow my Koi on so invaluable info for me learning about these young koi and Great to see you smashing it in Japan with you private small collection 👌👍👏😂🤣
Thanks, I’m very happy with the results from the show. It’s always nice to compete at that level and win. Yes very small collection 😳
Great explanation! A big blue and red asagi is something special. Great to see these grow and develop. I am really happy that i found out about your channel!
You are right a good Asagi really is hard to beat 👍.
I love a good Asagi, got to be one of my favourites👌another great grow out project that I will be following great interest, keep it up fellas, these series an element of koi keeping we just dont get to see usually 👍
They’ll be plenty of good ones to come from these. Thanks for watching, we’re working hard to keep the info coming.
Really good series of videos these, obviously very educated in the topic of koi. Wish you sold fish separately but hay ho lol. Cheers 👍
Thanks for your kind words. Our fish are available through an amazing network of dealers across the country who are a great extension of what we do.
Asagis are my number 1 favorite koi variety. Currently, I have 3 in my pond: 2 plain narumi asagis (one each from Hosokai and Oya), and 1 ginrin narumi (from Yamaju). When it comes to selecting tosai asagi, I also stick to the general rule of selecting specimens with very light blue color (usually almost white), milky white snouts, and the motokuro (pectoral fin pattern) being the only orange part of the body. With that said, my experience with Oya's asagis is that they generally remain light to medium blue in color all throughout and the relative amounts of orange they have either remains the same or increases only moderately. I have had some Oya asagis in the past 10 years that actually lost orange as they aged (with the motokuro's orange color receding into small, paddle-like forms). In contrast to your preference, I actually prefer bluish-white tosai with fully orange pectoral fins (even if they lack and/or will not develop orange in all other parts of their bodies, so long as it minimizes the probability of the motokuro being drastically reduced and any stray orange will appear in the blue netting pattern). I'm not sure if that was mostly due to their genetics or if it's due to having soft water in my home pond (in addition to the tropical climate we have here in the Philippines).
That’s interesting that you’ve found that because it’s not the same experience that I’ve had but in different water. Thanks for sharing.
Definitely always try to film more fish when possible
There’s plenty more to see on the channel.
Hi do you guys ship to the Caribbean more specific St. Kitts/Nevis W.I.
Afraid not at this time - we supply wholesale to Koi dealers across the UK.
@@Ricky_Stoddart_Koi okay thanks for the info
Your upload is flawed
Hi Mark
What’s the issue with it?
@@Ricky_Stoddart_Koi the file might be corrupt its not playing correctly
@@markalan8517 is there a particular part or just the whole thing as we have it playing perfectly here on multiple devices.
It's working fine now 👍
@@markalan8517 great stuff.