> >How can you tell ? Fish are cold-blooded > > > > Exakly, Mr. Auckland CityBoy. If you lived in the country, you Well excuse me all over the place ;-) Hey, I know where the country is. I've heard about it you know. It's that big green thing down the end of the motorway. Mud, cows, trees, s**t like that > would know that first thing every morning all the warm- and > cold-blooded critters come out to warm up in the 1st rays of > the sun. I thought the point of being a cold-blooded fish is that you don't have to warm up. Fish live in different temperature waters, Antarctic cod have anti-freeze blood, little neons live in warm Amazonian water. Neither of those come to the surface to warm up. My goldfish don't come to the glass on winter mornings holding up pictures of an electric heater or earmuffs and pointing to them with Little Tiny Tim faces. Especially since I took their crayons away. > Also, at nite, many animals become roadkill cause > after dark they go and sit on the warm [road] pavement. If > you live literally "immersed" in water, then you prolly > try to find some that suits your favor - as Russell said. Mammals are roadkill. When was the last time you ran over a herring ? Fish already live where it suits them. And ponds are liable to range from frozen over to sweltering in a summer sun, yet the fish cope jus' keepin' it real yo -- http://www.piclist.com hint: The PICList is archived three different ways. See http://www.piclist.com/#archives for details.