Didn't find rosacea, psoriasis, freckles or acne. Not even sunburn....

How about this one, he has spots (freckles):
?
Just becuase you've never heard of it, doesn't therefore make it a bad clue. Knowing Dave was from the US I checked out US street names - the point being that's part of the chase. What's the difference between using something from a certain area and using some reference to a particular section of culture that only some people will get.sidguppy wrote:check1. white cross
Street name for the prescription drug Dexedrine, a form of amphetamine orspeed. Named after the cross shape pressed into the top of the pill so it can be divided into quarters.
"He popped a white cross to cram for the history final."
never heard of this, and hence a request: please remind yourself that if you put a hint up: think internationally, otherwise it will turn into a small "incrowd game' where only people from a certain area will understand what you're talking about.....
so?If we can't see that this entire thread isn't a "small in-crowd game" then we are being very, very shortsighted...
Sidguppy:If we can't see that this entire thread isn't a "small in-crowd game" then we are being very, very shortsighted...
It's definitely worldwide but just kinda small and we have many fish to go so we need more people to poke their guesses (or ideas) in hereif it already is a small incrowd game, making it even smaller to a tiny incrowd of the small incrowd will only make this topic go fubar completely.
I think it's right, but Alex has ignored the new ending of the species name. He sticks to granulosus; the other fish he's referring to imo isJools wrote:?
Jools wrote: "because it belongs to the same genus as the last correct guess", which wasMarc van Arc wrote:, Yaya & Kolo
That's the one (quotes from the Emmens & Axelrod Catfish book). And as there's no "Emmensi" catfish (at least not in the Clog), it had to be the above species. Not my favourite booksidguppy wrote:
is aimed at the catelog!as genera go, well, at least I still lived when someone took out the camera......
think in the same vein about Siluriformes and find me a live one
Learn something new every day and I guess I need more books.according to science the Diplomystidae are the most primitive of all catfishes, hence at the root of all catfishy things ;)