LA
Young panda oranda with well started hood.
LA
Nice chocolate oranda.
LA
Another young panda oranda. Hood not well started yet.
LA
No two panda orandas look alike.
LA
Red oranda with well started hood. Really red telescope below.
Really, really red.
LA
Two-year-old quite round red oranda.
LA
Oranda with the "up-side-down" syndrome. He needs duckweed to eat.
LA
Looks good from both sides.
LA
Nice looking lionhead. Straight back. Hood still developing.
LA
Lionhead starting to look like a ranchu. Nice back.
LA
Not the best back.
LA
Another not so hot back.
LA
Looking lots like a ranchu.
LA
Calico ranchu.
LA
Another calico ranchu.
LA
Could this be a calico bubble eye?
LA
Not all bubble eyes are created equal.
LA
People always ask if they ever break their bubbles.
LA
We'll keep up with this guy over time.
LA
Pearl scale? Or golf ball with fins?
LA
And no two pearl scales are ever the same.
LA
Telescopes or black moors (redundant) are a nice addition.
LA
Is it just my imagination or are these guys getting scarce? Oriental
blacks stay black.
LA
American moors are usually not totally black.
LA
Telescopes also come in red.
LA
And white and calico. The ones with eye rings are the most striking.
LA
Young oranda with started hood and rather ugly tail.
LA
Three-year-old pricey oranda.
LA
Four-year-old pricier oranda.
LA
Young male fantail in love with the same oranda.
LA
Three-year-old blue/black oranda.
LA
Four-year-old blue/black oranda.
LA
Honker hood on this four-year-old "red."
LA
Ditto on this four-year-old red cap.
LA
Another four-year-old with a young fantail lover.
LA
For some strange reason, bubble eyes fascinate me.
Last Words:
Exotic goldfish are getting better and better every year. LA
©
2005, © 2007 LA Productions

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