Gailey
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- May 14, 2008
- Messages
- 3,783
Wow, don''t they fight Mochi? Everyone knows that the males fight and you can''t put them together, but I also heard that a male will hound the female so I never bought any of my George''s a wife. Yes, I know what you mean about same name different fish! I rarely keep mine above 18 months, maybe the celibate life is not so good for them after all. I think I''m on about George X by now!Date: 8/22/2009 5:57:46 PM
Author: mochi
Now, I find this very interesting! I have two beta fish living in one tank, a male and a female. Their names are Bonnie and Clyde. I love the way they wiggle when I come near the tank and great me. It''s so cute.
Gailey, I never thought about planting real water plants in them. I have a couple of lucky bamboo''s growing in them right now and doing pretty well. Granted, their fish container is pretty small but maybe I''ll get a larger one to grow some aquatic plants in them. I use to have a huge 60 gallon tank when I use to live in Phoenix, and goodness, was that a PIA to take care of!! I had 3 large angel fish in them along with a bunch of others. I also had one of those sucker fish which my daughter named ''BOB'' and he must have been replaced a good 3 or 4 times with a different ''Bob'' and my daughter never knew about it. Every day when she came home from school, she would go to the tank and say ''Hi Bob!''
She''s now 21y/o and I finally told her the truth about Bob...she was so shocked!![]()
They don''t fight at all. Both of these are #2 Bonnie and Clydes. Beta''s don''t live that long, unfortunately. 1st Clyde lived over 2 years. I slowly introduced them together, one living in a open ziplock until they started ignoring each other. And yes, they do make those bubble nests but I have never seen any babies.Date: 8/22/2009 6:09:10 PM
Author: Gailey
Wow, don''t they fight Mochi? Everyone knows that the males fight and you can''t put them together, but I also heard that a male will hound the female so I never bought any of my George''s a wife. Yes, I know what you mean about same name different fish! I rarely keep mine above 18 months, maybe the celibate life is not so good for them after all. I think I''m on about George X by now!Date: 8/22/2009 5:57:46 PM
Author: mochi
Now, I find this very interesting! I have two beta fish living in one tank, a male and a female. Their names are Bonnie and Clyde. I love the way they wiggle when I come near the tank and great me. It''s so cute.
Gailey, I never thought about planting real water plants in them. I have a couple of lucky bamboo''s growing in them right now and doing pretty well. Granted, their fish container is pretty small but maybe I''ll get a larger one to grow some aquatic plants in them. I use to have a huge 60 gallon tank when I use to live in Phoenix, and goodness, was that a PIA to take care of!! I had 3 large angel fish in them along with a bunch of others. I also had one of those sucker fish which my daughter named ''BOB'' and he must have been replaced a good 3 or 4 times with a different ''Bob'' and my daughter never knew about it. Every day when she came home from school, she would go to the tank and say ''Hi Bob!''
She''s now 21y/o and I finally told her the truth about Bob...she was so shocked!![]()
All my tanks have plants in them. I don''t have to worry about water changing so much I just top up most of the time. This is not a good idea for non-plant tanks though.
Do Bonnie and Clyde make bubble nests? Have they ever spawned?
Atta girl Mochi!Date: 8/22/2009 8:04:55 PM
Author: mochi
They don''t fight at all. Both of these are #2 Bonnie and Clydes. Beta''s don''t live that long, unfortunately. 1st Clyde lived over 2 years. I slowly introduced them together, one living in a open ziplock until they started ignoring each other. And yes, they do make those bubble nests but I have never seen any babies.
I love beta''s, they are so easy to take care of and pretty to look at. I think next week I''ll go looking for aquatic plants and a bigger tank for them.![]()
Thanks for the tips, MP. I had kept the kitchen lights on probably making the glare worse!Date: 8/22/2009 2:14:24 PM
Author: MonkeyPie
Yayyyy betta! I love those little fishies, they are so much fun and have tons of personality. I used to have one that I fed on the end of a long, thin stick, and he would leap out of the water to grap the stick and the food the moment it got near the surface. He was so much fun! And he lived AGES.
As for pictures, if you are using a point-and-shoot camera, try turning all the lights off in the room you''re photographing in, and then put one light source (a lamp works well if you take the shade off) on the opposite side of the tank from you. Then when you shoot, get pretty close to the glass and turn on the lamp. Don''t do it for too long as the lamp will heat up the water over time, but this gives you plenty of light with no glare, and less blur.
That python is wonderful! Who knows why the book I read didn't suggest something like that. The author said I would have to syphon my tanks out the window with my gargen hose and that would be an excellent way to water my outdoor plants at the same time. I'm WAY too lazy to do that!Date: 8/22/2009 1:51:56 PM
Author: Gailey
Nah, nah, nah!
What you need is a Python. I'll go snap some pictures of mine in a minute to show you how it works!
Meanwhile, Mandarin - meet George. the best way to take pictures is to turn off the flash and put your lens right on the tank.
You know MC, Mr MC is definitely getting the beta end of the deal (get it?). If your not careful this attitude will extend in to the world of diamonds and gems and then where will you be!
hahaha That would be my plan if something happens to our Betta. He''s a fairly common color scheme. . .Date: 8/22/2009 5:57:46 PM
Author: mochi
Now, I find this very interesting! I have two beta fish living in one tank, a male and a female. Their names are Bonnie and Clyde. I love the way they wiggle when I come near the tank and great me. It''s so cute.
Gailey, I never thought about planting real water plants in them. I have a couple of lucky bamboo''s growing in them right now and doing pretty well. Granted, their fish container is pretty small but maybe I''ll get a larger one to grow some aquatic plants in them. I use to have a huge 60 gallon tank when I use to live in Phoenix, and goodness, was that a PIA to take care of!! I had 3 large angel fish in them along with a bunch of others. I also had one of those sucker fish which my daughter named ''BOB'' and he must have been replaced a good 3 or 4 times with a different ''Bob'' and my daughter never knew about it. Every day when she came home from school, she would go to the tank and say ''Hi Bob!''
She''s now 21y/o and I finally told her the truth about Bob...she was so shocked!![]()
Mochi - just another quick reply to you. . .yet, Bettas do seem SO easy. You know, I think that they''ll be my main focus. I love fish, but I''m a bit too sentimental and I want fish that are low maintance as I cannot handle too many fatalities. Plus, I was reading with big tanks, that if an infection starts up, then the whole tank has to be restarted because the water & gravel can be contaminated (say with a parasite - the kinds in livebearing fish - such as Guppies, often everything is ruined and has to be bleached out.)Date: 8/22/2009 8:04:55 PM
Author: mochi
They don''t fight at all. Both of these are #2 Bonnie and Clydes. Beta''s don''t live that long, unfortunately. 1st Clyde lived over 2 years. I slowly introduced them together, one living in a open ziplock until they started ignoring each other. And yes, they do make those bubble nests but I have never seen any babies.
I love beta''s, they are so easy to take care of and pretty to look at. I think next week I''ll go looking for aquatic plants and a bigger tank for them.![]()
Treefrog, I am longing to hear about your tank. Do you only have saltwater or have you got freshwater too?Date: 8/23/2009 10:31:07 PM
Author: treefrog
Gailey and MC - thanks! I''ll get up some current pics soon. I haven''t taken any recently. That picture was taken shortly after I got them. They''re almost 5 now!
I agree - the Python is great. It may be overkill for a 1 - 2 gallon aquarium but for something larger, it''s great. Unfortunately, I have to use mine manually, without the sink hookup, since I can''t run freshwater through my aquarium. I can only top off evaporated water with freshwater (the salt doesn''t evaporate).
Fish are so much fun to watch. What a great deal MC - your both get something new to watch out of it
Treefrog!
Hi Gailey, you''re so generous with the compliments, thanks!Date: 8/23/2009 11:19:15 PM
Author: Gailey
Treefrog, I am longing to hear about your tank. Do you only have saltwater or have you got freshwater too?
Gawd, the man keeps fish too. Just how many levels of perfection can you hit Treefrog? I''d say you must be ugly, but I know you''re not. LOL
I''m sorry you lost a whole tank of fish!Date: 8/25/2009 11:18:21 AM
Author: Gailey
MC, I''ve just re-read this thread and realised somehow I missed a whole bunch of what you said.
Firstly, I''m sorry about your fatality. It''s not un-common and there will be more. Even Beta''s don''t live that long. Either you will get a little less sentimental about them (that''s what happened to me) or you''ll end up a basket case and have to give it up.
I''ve never had to re-start any of my tanks and NEVER bleach everything out! It is true that by adding a new fish with a disease then you run the risk of infecting the whole tank. I lost a tank full of fish that way. I am very wary about adding new fish to my 100 gal for that reason and haven''t done so for a few years now. If I did, I would almost certainly use a quarantine tank.
It has been years since I have used any pharmaceuticals in the tank, although I did spend a small fortune on them. Invariably they didn''t work. The thing that has kept my fish healthy was time and building up a stable eco-system. Letting the tank mature is the key and you''ve heard my philosophy about the plants, so I won''t re-hash that again.
I always add Melafix to the George tank when I get a new George. You can''t beat it. Especially as you have no way or knowing for sure what killed the previous inhabitant.
Okay, I just read on the loaches site that a person found a single thread then their fish died soon after. I''ll hunt for levamisole tomorrow.Date: 8/25/2009 11:46:49 PM
Author: Gailey
Article about Levamisole (de-wormer)
Old article from the Krib
Info from Guppy Log
Info from Loaches on Line
Info from Yahoo answers
Here''s a few more articles MC