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Fish through the mail.
Hello everybody, Here's my problem: I have a 20gl tank with one GF in It. He has definitely out grown the tank. The local pet store has a buy-back policy, which is fine. The fish is quite a handsome fellow and it wouldn't be long before he would be sold. I fear that someone not so knowledgable would buy him, and he might wind up in some sloppily maintained 5 or 10gl tank. I would not wish that upon him. My brother has the solution to the problem. He keeps GF and he always maintains his tank well. He has a 100gl tank with just 2 GF's in it and is eager and happy to take my fish. The only problem is, I live in Chicago and he lives in Washington DC. Is there any way to bag and box up a fish and send it through the mail, let's say by one of those overnight, express, next day delivery services? Does any manufacturer make a kit that can be purchased that would achieve these ends? Has anyone of you folks done so. If yes, then how? I know fish are delivered to pet stores in water tight box containers by carriers. I went to the pet store and made some inquiries as to how they did it, but they didn't have a clue as to how a hobbyist would do it. Thanks for any help you might offer. charlie |
Fish through the mail.
Its best to use a heavy plastic bag packed in a styrofoam box inside a carton.
Don't feed fish for 3 days prior to shipping. Add amquel and stress coat to water. Ingrid says: " The BEST way to move fish is in a heavy duty plastic bag. They dont loose scales, dont get knocked around. Any fish over 5 inches needs its own plastic bag. Only put enough water over the fish in the bag to cover it to a depth of twice the height of the fish. Blow up the bag with air, twist the bag closed TIGHTLY, fold the twisted top down and rubber band it. It should be tight as a drum. The reason is it is easy for a fish to get caught in a fold and not be able to move the gills and breath. The low amount of water will slosh nicely aerating the water with the air in the bag. The longer the move, the bigger the bag, the more air, the fewer fish. If the move will take more than a couple hours Amquel or other ammonia neutralizing stuff can be added to the bag water." Ship by fed-ex priority overnite ( next am delivery) |
Fish through the mail.
it is extremely difficult to mail fish without the proper equipment because of the
time it takes in shipping. I am in Milwaukee with an outdoor pond just for GF. let me know. Ingrid (charlie) wrote: Hello everybody, Here's my problem: I have a 20gl tank with one GF in It. He has definitely out grown the tank. The local pet store has a buy-back policy, which is fine. The fish is quite a handsome fellow and it wouldn't be long before he would be sold. I fear that someone not so knowledgable would buy him, and he might wind up in some sloppily maintained 5 or 10gl tank. I would not wish that upon him. My brother has the solution to the problem. He keeps GF and he always maintains his tank well. He has a 100gl tank with just 2 GF's in it and is eager and happy to take my fish. The only problem is, I live in Chicago and he lives in Washington DC. Is there any way to bag and box up a fish and send it through the mail, let's say by one of those overnight, express, next day delivery services? Does any manufacturer make a kit that can be purchased that would achieve these ends? Has anyone of you folks done so. If yes, then how? I know fish are delivered to pet stores in water tight box containers by carriers. I went to the pet store and made some inquiries as to how they did it, but they didn't have a clue as to how a hobbyist would do it. Thanks for any help you might offer. charlie ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
Fish through the mail.
Charlie,
There are these great bags on the market by Kordon that breath allowing the ammonia to dissipate out of the bag. There is also a product called BagBuddies that works well at releasing oxygen into the water and binding the nitrites. I get fish all the time from the coast and send fish via USPS Priority mail. You get a sturdy box and go to HD and get some sheets of styrofoam and cut the sheets to fit on the inside of the box. If you can't get the Kordon bags just use some heavy plastic bags from the LFS. Leave plenty of air on top of the water. Probably one fish per bag. Like the other gentleman said, do not feed the fish for three days before and if you want fed it peas or spirulina four or five days before and this will help clean the fish out. If you can get oxygen fill the top of the bag of water with O2. Call your post Office and find out if their mail is shipped out in the morning or the evening. Then go to the post office as close to this time as you can to make sure the fish will be in the box as short a time as possible. Just before you leave for the PO put the fish in the bag and fill with air. Put the bag in the box and fill the extra area with styrofoam peanuts. Put enough in and around the bag so it doesn't move around. Close the box tightly and get the label on it and it helps if you have a picture of a fish on the box saying it is live fish. Usually I mail in the late afternoon because here there is a truck that comes in at about 1700 to take the mail to the city. The box should arrive on the morning of the third day, which includes the day you mailed it. It is best to mail on a Monday. Anyone that tells you that this will not work has their head stuck in the sand. I just received 40 fish this way including Philly Veils, so it does work and it works all the time. If you want it to arrive at his home earlier you can use the Express Priority Mail, which would probably work for your since you are in Chicago and he is in D.C. Where I live in the boonies it doesn't make a difference where it is Priority Mail or Express Priority mail it all arrives a the same time. HTH Tom L.L. ------------------------------------------------- charlie wrote: Hello everybody, Here's my problem: I have a 20gl tank with one GF in It. He has definitely out grown the tank. The local pet store has a buy-back policy, which is fine. The fish is quite a handsome fellow and it wouldn't be long before he would be sold. I fear that someone not so knowledgable would buy him, and he might wind up in some sloppily maintained 5 or 10gl tank. I would not wish that upon him. My brother has the solution to the problem. He keeps GF and he always maintains his tank well. He has a 100gl tank with just 2 GF's in it and is eager and happy to take my fish. The only problem is, I live in Chicago and he lives in Washington DC. Is there any way to bag and box up a fish and send it through the mail, let's say by one of those overnight, express, next day delivery services? Does any manufacturer make a kit that can be purchased that would achieve these ends? Has anyone of you folks done so. If yes, then how? I know fish are delivered to pet stores in water tight box containers by carriers. I went to the pet store and made some inquiries as to how they did it, but they didn't have a clue as to how a hobbyist would do it. Thanks for any help you might offer. charlie |
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