Dick: Henry has that soon-to-be nisai Showa he latched onto last October, and there is at least one tosai Kohaku he won at auction in June. And, I'm thinking there was another Kohaku he got at auction in May... might not remember that correctly. I've only seen pics of these. And it may seem kinda silly given the Sanke I have waiting for me, but I really want to see Yamabuki! My first koi was a Yamabuki and I've always had one until about 2 years ago when I lost mine. I've been waiting for the right one and it had to be female. Mat was going to supply her, but from last year's harvest there were none he was satisfied to supply. He made a Yamabuki X Yamabuki cross this Spring, so there should be a lot to choose from. Ready to try to pick the best likely female from a tank with maybe hundreds of shiny things?

...LOL I'm hoping I don't have to wait another year to find the gold.
Koiczar: Yep, Nisei Koi Farm is scheduled to be at both the Allentown show and the Sacramento show that weekend. That's before the harvest, so I'm not sure what you'll be seeing. Back about 4 years ago when their breeding program was just getting underway, Mat brought a goulash of young fish to the Orlando show. They were scrawny things and definitely not his best. But there were some jewels among them even back then. I remember we had Torazo, Oomo and Nogami attend the show that year. When they got to Mat's single tank of tosai they stopped....these are guys whose whole lives are centered on selecting from young fish. The three agreed that the best tosai among all at the show in the vats of over 15 dealers was a gin rin sanke in Mat's tank...and a likely female at that. A lot of the visitors to the show just walked past because they did not understand Matsunosuke genetics. The young fish are a fairly plain, almost dull orange... not the bright reds of colored-up tosai so often brought to shows. A year later, 8" tosai had become 20", big-boned bruisers. They weren't top award level fish, but folks got more than their money's worth.