Fish Have Clubs, Why Can't I?
Part 1: A Name and a Website
by Schuyler Sloane
Founder and President of The Northeast Philadelphia Aquarium Society
www.phillyfishclub.com
Aquarticles
O.K., so fish don't have clubs - but that doesn't mean that you can't have one. The
whole concept of an aquarium club is something that is near and dear to my heart. I
started my aquarium society on New Year's Eve 2003, and got so excited that one thing led
to another and within a few days I had officially launched the Northeast Philadelphia
Aquarium Society.
At the time of writing, the club is a year and a half old. My fellow fish enthusiast
Bill Gehan and I have been working hard to build up our club to offer the most
entertaining and educational experiences possible. In that time we have gone from having
just a website to having sponsors, speakers, door prizes, and so much more. There were so
many things that we were working on when I began to write this that looking into the
future I am sure that I am going to be adding a paragraph that says UPDATE!
Before I start getting too far into the future let me tell you about the
beginning:
- I had a tropical fish tank when I was a kid, but all I can really remember now is that
we had electric blue crawfish and goldfish. Looking back I know now that the goldfish were
feeder fish that had escaped the clutches of the crawfish.
- Fast forward to the year 2000: I was bored. I needed a hobby to take up some of the
free time that I had, so off to the pet store I went. There I found a ten gallon tank that
seemed to remind me of my childhood, so I got it. And for the first couple of years there
it sat, always filled with guppies or with some weird salamander that I only remember as
being a waterdog. That was followed by fancier guppies, and then mollies and platys and
the first of many bettas. Next came a tank for the bedroom - I needed something to look at
while in bed - then a few more bettas and then a small tank for the kitchen. You know how
it goes - aquariums are like potato chips, you can't eat just one.
- As my interest in tropical fish began to grow I found myself looking more and more
towards the Internet, and what I found there was a treasure trove of information - a lot
of it coming from various aquarium clubs around the world. The thought of joining one of
these clubs was starting to sound like a great idea. Look at all the things these clubs
were offering: prizes, raffles, auctions of aquarium equipment - how could things go
wrong? In a city the size of mine (Philadelphia) how could there not be an aquarium club
near me? That's when I hit a brick wall. Sure, Philadelphia had a few clubs and I was sure
they were great, but two problems came up, the first being location. At the time I was not
driving, and many of these meetings were not really viable for me to get to using public
transportation. The second was exclusivity - there was a betta club, a reef club, a killie
club and a few other small groups around but nothing in the broader sense of the hobby
except for the Bucks County Aquarium Society, which was great but I had no way to get
there. I did eventually become a member there but that's a whole other story.
- A few months later while working on my website I had an idea. My website was getting
boring and needed to be re-done - why not turn it into a fish related site so that people
could get together and talk about fish? Within hours it became clear to me that I was
creating my own little aquarium club....and the rest is history.
The following guide is just that, a guide. I want to take you through the steps I went
through to create an aquarium society. I am still in the process of building mine. You
will find, as I have, that you will always be building your club. You have to, otherwise
it will not grow and prosper. By always keeping things fresh and exciting you will always
find people to join you. When they do they will hopefully become life long friends.
Chapter 1 - What's in a name?
'What's in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.'
-William Shakespeare. And that's a good point. What is in a name? An aquarium society
needs a name, without it what would you tell people you belong to?
There are many things to think about when you are trying to name your club. Your
location: When you live in say Philadelphia do you really want to name your club the
Philadelphia Aquarium Society? That's well and good as long as you are the only aquarium
club in Philadelphia - but let's face it you won't be, and the people who run the
Northeast Philadelphia Aquarium Society (namely me) would not be too happy that a club has
taken part of its name and may be confusing to people looking for The Northeast
Philadelphia Aquarium Society. Try to be more specific when it comes to naming after your
location. If you live in the southwest of your city then you may want to call it the
Southwest (my city) Aquarium Society. It seems to me that when I look for aquarium
societies to join the name usually tells me how far I am going to have to travel in that
area to find the society.
There are instances however when there is no location in the name of the society, such
as is in our next part, The Fish Specific Club. You walk into a meeting of the local
angelfish society and all you see is goldfish. Not that goldfish aren't great but all you
keep is angelfish, so it would be really confusing for you wouldn't it?
So what would I recommend when naming your club? How about combining both? - for
example how about the Northwest Philadelphia Association of Fancy Guppy Breeders and
Keepers?....... A little long isn't it? Well what are you to do now?....You could shorten
it to the NWPAFGB&K, but then people may just look at you and go HUH! - plus either of
those names would make for an awfully long website address and take up too much space on
your flyers and such. Remember people like simplicity. In closing remember the old saying
K.I.S.S. - Keep it Simple Stupid. Anybody who remembers the old days of petfish.net should
remember that.
Part 2: The set up
O.K. you have chosen a name for your new aquarium society. Now what do you do? Well, this
could go in many directions - you could start posting flyers all over the place, you could
set up a web page, you could do about 100 different things. But take it easy and prepare a
little bit more. Let me ask you this: do you visit or are you a member of an aquarium
society? If not, then you should really visit a few meetings - the inner workings of the
clubs are really great. Get to know some of the members and the people who run the club,
especially the founders if they are available. They will be able give you the best advice
on what to do.
'Then what do I do?'
The next thing that I would do is get a website. You are probably saying 'But I don't have
anything to put on it!' - I thought this too, but I couldn't have been more wrong. When I
originally set up the aquarium society website it was nothing more than my own personal
website and had close to nothing in fishy content. Adding this became the basis of my
experiments in web page design. Every time I had an idea I was able to go right to the
site, make an adjustment, and I was done. The websitegrew from being a one page ad to a
30+ page informative website. 'But doesn't a web site require a lot of knowledge and
expense?' - Well if you are sitting at your computer then you are past the biggest hurdle
of them all. I started out by using a free website host like Yahoo and Lycos, but a large
list of others provide. Remember you don't have to build the world's largest and most
comprehensive aquarium web site, but you do want to get as much information out as
possible about what your club is doing.
İSchuyler Sloane 2005
Go to: Part 2: Flyers and Advertising. The Meeting
Place.
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