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#1
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If anyone can help me with this I'd be most grateful. I have a 3,000 gallon
pond with 7 Koi about 20-25ins each, normal bio filter with sediment chamber set up. Due to the recent hot weather (water temp 23c here!) I decided to treat the fish to some extra oxygen so I bought an air pump and two airstones, installed it all and switched it on expecting the fish to enjoy this extra boost. What did they do? Swam to the bottom of the pond and hid under the venturi to get as far from the airstones as possible. A bit of moving and tweaking and they are now swimming around normally. Except they have stopped feeding - It's been nearly a week now of the hottest weather and I've had to fish out every pellet that I've put in - They don't even rise when the food goes in. I tried switching the air pump off for a day but that didn't make any difference to them either. There is nothing else edible in the pond except a very small amount of residual blanket weed from a pond balance treatment two months ago which they nibble at occasionally as they always have done. All other factors are the same: Perfect Ammonia, Nitrate and Nitrite levels. PH around 7.5 - 8.0 (where it normally is) same food fed in the same place at the same time as normal. I understand that Koi are sensitive, but surely after a week they would get used to the airstones (they're turned down low so they don't create a massive current). Any suggestions? |
#2
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![]() "Mark Cable" wrote in message ... If anyone can help me with this I'd be most grateful. I have a 3,000 gallon pond with 7 Koi about 20-25ins each, normal bio filter with sediment chamber set up. Due to the recent hot weather (water temp 23c here!) I decided to treat the fish to some extra oxygen so I bought an air pump and two airstones, installed it all and switched it on expecting the fish to enjoy this extra boost. What did they do? Swam to the bottom of the pond and hid under the venturi to get as far from the airstones as possible. A bit of moving and tweaking and they are now swimming around normally. Except they have stopped feeding - It's been nearly a week now of the hottest weather and I've had to fish out every pellet that I've put in - They don't even rise when the food goes in. I tried switching the air pump off for a day but that didn't make any difference to them either. There is nothing else edible in the pond except a very small amount of residual blanket weed from a pond balance treatment two months ago which they nibble at occasionally as they always have done. All other factors are the same: Perfect Ammonia, Nitrate and Nitrite levels. PH around 7.5 - 8.0 (where it normally is) same food fed in the same place at the same time as normal. I understand that Koi are sensitive, but surely after a week they would get used to the airstones (they're turned down low so they don't create a massive current). Any suggestions? I'd continue on your normal schedule. I don't think I have ever heard of a fed fish starving to death. They'll come and get it when they are ready. You may also want to try letting some of the pellets sink. Don't net them out. Let them fall to the fish and see what they do. BV. |
#3
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![]() Converting to F, that means your water temp is 73.... okay, that's the limit of my knowledge ;-) but I did find a discussion on another board that may answer your question. http://www.koi.com.my/forum/KOI_Talk...3/Water_Too_Wa rm_P31057/ kathy :-) A HREF="http://www.onceuponapond.com/"Once upon a pond/A |
#4
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I had the same problem with my koi when I introduce some as's to my
pond. They stayed away for about 1 day. Usually there is always ONE fish with the most guts that leads the others out of hiding...luckily I have 4 that are not shy as the rest. And yes those 4 are the fattest! ;-) |
#5
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I have a very large amount of air coming from three airstones in my larger
pond, raising the water level above the airstones almost a half inch. I don't remember my koi having any concerns with the air stones. At times they play and roll in the current. I would boost the air flow back to maximum, since their is no such thing as too much. Was there anything else, like a heron that came the same day you installed the air stones? -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "Mark Cable" wrote in message ... If anyone can help me with this I'd be most grateful. I have a 3,000 gallon pond with 7 Koi about 20-25ins each, normal bio filter with sediment chamber set up. Due to the recent hot weather (water temp 23c here!) I decided to treat the fish to some extra oxygen so I bought an air pump and two airstones, installed it all and switched it on expecting the fish to enjoy this extra boost. What did they do? Swam to the bottom of the pond and hid under the venturi to get as far from the airstones as possible. A bit of moving and tweaking and they are now swimming around normally. Except they have stopped feeding - It's been nearly a week now of the hottest weather and I've had to fish out every pellet that I've put in - They don't even rise when the food goes in. I tried switching the air pump off for a day but that didn't make any difference to them either. There is nothing else edible in the pond except a very small amount of residual blanket weed from a pond balance treatment two months ago which they nibble at occasionally as they always have done. All other factors are the same: Perfect Ammonia, Nitrate and Nitrite levels. PH around 7.5 - 8.0 (where it normally is) same food fed in the same place at the same time as normal. I understand that Koi are sensitive, but surely after a week they would get used to the airstones (they're turned down low so they don't create a massive current). Any suggestions? |
#6
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Problem is covariance. Could be the fish are hanging out in cooler spots
(dark and deep - appear to be hiding). Could be that it is too warm for them to be interested in eating... Could be there is enough oxygen in the pond so they don't need to suck up to the air stones (doesn't mean that isn't why there is enough oxygen)... "Mark Cable" wrote in message ... If anyone can help me with this I'd be most grateful. I have a 3,000 gallon pond with 7 Koi about 20-25ins each, normal bio filter with sediment chamber set up. Due to the recent hot weather (water temp 23c here!) I decided to treat the fish to some extra oxygen so I bought an air pump and two airstones, installed it all and switched it on expecting the fish to enjoy this extra boost. What did they do? Swam to the bottom of the pond and hid under the venturi to get as far from the airstones as possible. A bit of moving and tweaking and they are now swimming around normally. Except they have stopped feeding - It's been nearly a week now of the hottest weather and I've had to fish out every pellet that I've put in - They don't even rise when the food goes in. I tried switching the air pump off for a day but that didn't make any difference to them either. There is nothing else edible in the pond except a very small amount of residual blanket weed from a pond balance treatment two months ago which they nibble at occasionally as they always have done. All other factors are the same: Perfect Ammonia, Nitrate and Nitrite levels. PH around 7.5 - 8.0 (where it normally is) same food fed in the same place at the same time as normal. I understand that Koi are sensitive, but surely after a week they would get used to the airstones (they're turned down low so they don't create a massive current). Any suggestions? |
#7
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Mark Cable wrote:
If anyone can help me with this I'd be most grateful. I'm not an experienced ponder but here's a thought. Could it be that by adding the airstones you've destroyed the normal stratification of the water (cooler at the bottom, warm at the top)? Obviously you've had water circulating all the time with your filtration but now you've changes the way water's moving in your pond. By improving the mixing you've perhaps robbed the fish of some of their "comfort zones". Tim -- Remove the obvious to reply by email. |
#8
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what is the temp of the water?
most fish play in air bubbles, perhaps there was a predator made a visit. Ingrid "Mark Cable" wrote: If anyone can help me with this I'd be most grateful. I have a 3,000 gallon pond with 7 Koi about 20-25ins each, normal bio filter with sediment chamber set up. Due to the recent hot weather (water temp 23c here!) I decided to treat the fish to some extra oxygen so I bought an air pump and two airstones, installed it all and switched it on expecting the fish to enjoy this extra boost. What did they do? Swam to the bottom of the pond and hid under the venturi to get as far from the airstones as possible. A bit of moving and tweaking and they are now swimming around normally. Except they have stopped feeding - It's been nearly a week now of the hottest weather and I've had to fish out every pellet that I've put in - They don't even rise when the food goes in. I tried switching the air pump off for a day but that didn't make any difference to them either. There is nothing else edible in the pond except a very small amount of residual blanket weed from a pond balance treatment two months ago which they nibble at occasionally as they always have done. All other factors are the same: Perfect Ammonia, Nitrate and Nitrite levels. PH around 7.5 - 8.0 (where it normally is) same food fed in the same place at the same time as normal. I understand that Koi are sensitive, but surely after a week they would get used to the airstones (they're turned down low so they don't create a massive current). Any suggestions? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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. |
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