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CalmedByFish

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Posts posted by CalmedByFish

  1. The only car that the rental company could come up with for our 4-day move reeks of cigarette. I've got to put my plastic tubs of fish in there.

    I was planning to run air pumps, but maybe the fish are better off not having cigarette pumped into their water! Anybody know?

    • Sad 1
  2. On 11/4/2021 at 8:01 AM, gardenman said:

    the owner talked of the giant sailfin mollies they'd had in the past. I'd seen them around 40 years ago or so in a local pet shop where the owner had bought a pair of retired breeders and the mollies were eight or more inches long. Just gorgeous fish.

    That is super cool. It's probably a very small percentage of the forum that got to see them in person!

    I'd actually like an extra-big vibrant blue betta. Almost the size of an angelfish. 🙂 

    • Like 1
  3. Editing to add: I know this is far-fetched, but just incase, what's the safe way to deal with an activated heat pack that breaks open? (Maybe @Hobbit would know?)

    I'm just 1 week away from that 1,000 mile move. I ordered ACO's 72 hour heat packs, and mylar blankets.

    The fish and plants will be in 7 plastic totes. I'm thinking of wrapping 2 totes per mylar blanket, with 1 heat pack sitting between the 2 totes. (Every tote will have a thermometer that I can pluck out to check.)

    See any danger in that? Like the heat packs warping the plastic of the totes, or a fire hazard, etc.)

  4. On 10/31/2021 at 6:22 PM, Patrick_G said:

    One bit of advice I’ve heard a few times is to start off with a lot of shrimp. There seems to be a critical mass needed to start a colony.

    Related to that, I've heard it helps to use a tank with a small bottom. The idea is that if the boys don't need to go far to find the girls, they're more likely to succeed. 

    • Like 1
  5. On 10/31/2021 at 10:24 PM, Atitagain said:

    Moral to this story: even if this would happen in nature there was no reason for it to happen in my tank. I easily could/ should have been responsible enough to not make them suffer.

    That gets to the point well. You're exactly right.

    And thanks for the empathy towards this human, too. That's kind of you.

    • Like 1
  6. I wish I'd known...

    I give my 1 angelfish a juvenile endler a couple times per week. The first time, to make sure I wouldn't be torturing the food fish, I watched. The angel gulped the endler fry, spat it out looking unconscious, instantly gulped it again, end of story. 

    Since then, I haven't watched. I just notice when there aren't any food fish in the tank, then add 1-2. 

    But today I gave the angel 1 half-grown endler, instead of a fry. Never again. The angel sucked it into his mouth, spat it back out clearly injured, and it swam (vibrating) to the other side of the tank and back. The angel noticed, and did the same thing again. That second time, the endler came out alive, but too hurt to swim. A few seconds later, the angel actually swallowed it. The process lasted 2-3 minutes.

    Lesson learned: Watch.

    If you're feeding live animals to other animals, watch to make sure it's happening in a way that isn't causing prolonged or unnecessary suffering. For me, that means the angel will never again be given live food larger than a nibble, so the eating will be "gulp, gone" instead of prolonged or painful. The guidelines might be different in your tanks, for you to meet the same goal. But regardless, it's a topic to pay attention to. I wish I had been.

    • Like 1
  7. On 10/31/2021 at 9:04 AM, Guppysnail said:

    I remember 42 and think it’s crazy how I thought I had the world figured out at 18-25-35-42. 😉I’m convinced in another 10 years I’ll look back at right now and think the same thing again.

    I've been thinking the same thing for years! The thought first struck me when I was in my mid thirties, remembered an experience I had near 26, and realized, "I thought I was grown! Grown?!

    So now I try to respect people who think they're grown - regardless of age - as being "on the path." Whether younger or older than I am, a person who assumes their own maturity is on one of the earlier stepping stones on the path we all take.

    Some get farther down that path than others, some live more years than others, and they don't necessarily correlate. 

    • Like 1
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