![]() |
note to new ponders
After a completely non-mysterious fish death, which robbed us of three nice
fish in one night, a couple of weeks ago, I thought I would mention it to any new folks who might lurk here. I so seldom have any insight to offer, compared to the active experts here, that I didn't think to post it, until I was chiming in on BV's OT post about his aquarium. The point of the post is to use other methods besides a net if you have to move any fish, especially koi. If you can't do it any other way, at least carry them in a tub of some kind to their new location. Even if you don't injure them, a net gets them stressed and stirred up, and, in our case, they jumped. Now, we are afraid to use our new pond in its current configuration, because we are afraid it is too shallow, and the planned elegant effect of a pond with the top edge close to the ground must give way to the safety and practicality of having three courses of bricks around the pond, so the fish are less likely to make it out of the pond, should they get frisky (energetic, that is). I shouldn't let it bother me, but I had a certain look in mind for this patio and pond, and it is going to be totally different now. Oh well, it's better than losing fish. Anyway, go easy on the nets for moving fish. |
new water will often make fish jump. cant do a net? where you pull the net up when
the pond is alone and push it down when sitting by the pond? Ingrid "Ann in Houston" wrote: After a completely non-mysterious fish death, which robbed us of three nice fish in one night, a couple of weeks ago, I thought I would mention it to any new folks who might lurk here. I so seldom have any insight to offer, compared to the active experts here, that I didn't think to post it, until I was chiming in on BV's OT post about his aquarium. The point of the post is to use other methods besides a net if you have to move any fish, especially koi. If you can't do it any other way, at least carry them in a tub of some kind to their new location. Even if you don't injure them, a net gets them stressed and stirred up, and, in our case, they jumped. Now, we are afraid to use our new pond in its current configuration, because we are afraid it is too shallow, and the planned elegant effect of a pond with the top edge close to the ground must give way to the safety and practicality of having three courses of bricks around the pond, so the fish are less likely to make it out of the pond, should they get frisky (energetic, that is). I shouldn't let it bother me, but I had a certain look in mind for this patio and pond, and it is going to be totally different now. Oh well, it's better than losing fish. Anyway, go easy on the nets for moving fish. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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. |
Maybe I read Ann wrong, but I think she was saying, don't use a net to
catch and carry them in. I know I don't even net my goldfish, I herd them into a bucket and carry them out of the pond. With koi, I herd them into a big tub and bag them from that tub, water & fish as one. ;o) ~ jan On Sat, 23 Oct 2004 21:04:02 GMT, wrote: new water will often make fish jump. cant do a net? where you pull the net up when the pond is alone and push it down when sitting by the pond? Ingrid "Ann in Houston" wrote: After a completely non-mysterious fish death, which robbed us of three nice fish in one night, a couple of weeks ago, I thought I would mention it to any new folks who might lurk here. I so seldom have any insight to offer, compared to the active experts here, that I didn't think to post it, until I was chiming in on BV's OT post about his aquarium. The point of the post is to use other methods besides a net if you have to move any fish, especially koi. If you can't do it any other way, at least carry them in a tub of some kind to their new location. Even if you don't injure them, a net gets them stressed and stirred up, and, in our case, they jumped. Now, we are afraid to use our new pond in its current configuration, because we are afraid it is too shallow, and the planned elegant effect of a pond with the top edge close to the ground must give way to the safety and practicality of having three courses of bricks around the pond, so the fish are less likely to make it out of the pond, should they get frisky (energetic, that is). I shouldn't let it bother me, but I had a certain look in mind for this patio and pond, and it is going to be totally different now. Oh well, it's better than losing fish. Anyway, go easy on the nets for moving fish. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~ 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. ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= East/West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:
Maybe I read Ann wrong, but I think she was saying, don't use a net to catch and carry them in. I know I don't even net my goldfish, I herd them into a bucket and carry them out of the pond. With koi, I herd them into a big tub and bag them from that tub, water & fish as one. ;o) ~ jan That's how I read it, too. I have fortunately never had to catch a fish in my large pond, but I learned long ago, with aquariums, that it's a whole lot less stress on both me and my fish to do the herding trick into an appropriate sized container. -- derek |
"Derek Broughton" wrote in message ... ~ jan JJsPond.us wrote: Maybe I read Ann wrong, but I think she was saying, don't use a net to catch and carry them in. I know I don't even net my goldfish, I herd them into a bucket and carry them out of the pond. With koi, I herd them into a big tub and bag them from that tub, water & fish as one. ;o) ~ jan That's how I read it, too. I have fortunately never had to catch a fish in my large pond, but I learned long ago, with aquariums, that it's a whole lot less stress on both me and my fish to do the herding trick into an appropriate sized container. -- derek I suspect my newsreader is omitting posts again. I just get these gaps in threads with references to other messages within the thread. Anyway, what brought this back up, and in a different thread at that? Out of the blue, I saw Jan's reference to the OP, and a speculation as to the point I was making. And, yes, she read me right. We do use a large mesh net to get them, but we don't use it to lift them out of the water. We slide a tub under the net and carry the fish, with the water, over to the new pond. Sometimes the fish don't even seem to be aware of the move. They just seem a little disoriented at the new surroundings. Then, they seem to recognize their former pond-mates and settle right in. I hate to use the net to capture them, but we have never been successful in herding them into a tub. We seem to be able to herd them into the net, because it's less visible. We hold the net down in the water, just long enough to get the tub under them, and then lift them out. I addressed it to new ponders because I didn't know anyone did it any differently for quite a while. |
"Derek Broughton" wrote in message ... ~ jan JJsPond.us wrote: Maybe I read Ann wrong, but I think she was saying, don't use a net to catch and carry them in. I know I don't even net my goldfish, I herd them into a bucket and carry them out of the pond. With koi, I herd them into a big tub and bag them from that tub, water & fish as one. ;o) ~ jan That's how I read it, too. I have fortunately never had to catch a fish in my large pond, but I learned long ago, with aquariums, that it's a whole lot less stress on both me and my fish to do the herding trick into an appropriate sized container. -- derek As far as my aquarium fish, I've always netted them and have never had a problem with it. They've never seemed to be the worse for the wear, as they are never in the net to make that much of a difference. A pond, however, is a different story altogether. There is too much space to be chasing them around in. and that will stress them more than the netting itself will. In a pond environment it is always best to herd them into a small area and capture them in a bucket or another recepticle. Of course, if you have fish as old as my maroon clown female (13-14 yrs), she has given up on running, and actually will swim right into the net. |
george wrote:
"Derek Broughton" wrote in message ... That's how I read it, too. I have fortunately never had to catch a fish in my large pond, but I learned long ago, with aquariums, that it's a whole lot less stress on both me and my fish to do the herding trick into an appropriate sized container. As far as my aquarium fish, I've always netted them and have never had a problem with it. They've never seemed to be the worse for the wear, Well, sure... I never see them use the two-liter pop bottle trick in the aquarium store either, but they're better at netting than I've ever been :-) If you don't have a problem netting them, then that's fine. If you spend more than a couple of minutes chasing a fish with a net, then you need another method. A pond, however, is a different story altogether. There is too much space to be chasing them around in. and that will stress them more than the netting itself will. That was the point I was trying to make. There's nothing inherently wrong with using a net. Of course, if you have fish as old as my maroon clown female (13-14 yrs), she has given up on running, and actually will swim right into the net. _that_ certainly cuts down on the stress! -- derek |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 03:30 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FishKeepingBanter.com