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#51
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On Fri, 07 Apr 2006 08:09:28 GMT, Altum wrote:
BTW, you should see the pictures of livers from discus fed on beef heart in his book. The livers are huge, not functioning properly, and filled with fat globules. Animal fats are very bad for fish and both dog and cat foods contain a lot of animal fat. Anyone feeding cat or dog food had a look at their fishes livers? Lots of the fishvets have, that teach the courses to the AKCA Koi Health Advisors. Why I try to encourage people not to feed that stuff, to read labels, etc. IMHO, If money is an issue, it would be better to lower the fish load, and only use a good quality processed food as a treat when you go out an visit the fish. They can live off the pond, if it is large enough, planted & established. Not to mention this will lower the maintenance on the filter. ~ jan ~ jan/WA Zone 7a |
#52
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Koi-Lo wrote:
Everyone has an opinion worth hearing. I doubt you realize it, but that's an incredibly condescending statement. You are confusing opinion with the science that Ingrid and I are trying to present. If you choose to wear blinders and not read veterinary articles and aquaculture literature that's your choice. If you did, you would learn that trout chow and catfish chow are developed for aquacultured trout and catfish, not pet koi. They are designed to provide the cheapest possible food that provides short-term health, rapid growth, and palatable flesh when the fish reaches someone's dinner table. That's not the usual goal for pet fish. I'm sure your fish are fine, but they're not likely to have the same long-term health and extensive lifespan of fish fed diets that have been optimized for koi. My OPINION is that keeping five koi on a diet optimized for health and longevity is preferable to keeping fifty koi on cheap catfish and trout chow. -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
#53
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![]() "Altum" wrote in message . net... Koi-Lo wrote: Everyone has an opinion worth hearing. I doubt you realize it, but that's an incredibly condescending statement. You are confusing opinion with the science that Ingrid and I are trying to present. It's not condescending. It's the truth. Everyone's opinion is worth hearing. This isn't a communist country. :-)) Science? Have you any peer reviewed studies done on koi and their feeding here in the USA? Studies done with control groups and by people with no vested interest in any feed company in any way? I honestly looked on the net months ago and came up with nothing. Nothing but anecdotes and the glowing claims made by those selling such products. If you choose to wear blinders and not read veterinary articles and aquaculture literature that's your choice. If you did, you would learn that trout chow and catfish chow are developed for aquacultured trout and catfish, not pet koi. And yet koi thrive and reproduce on these feeds and I was unable to find anything ... see above. They are designed to provide the cheapest possible food that provides short-term health, rapid growth, and palatable flesh when the fish reaches someone's dinner table. That's not the usual goal for pet fish. I'm sure your fish are fine, but they're not likely to have the same long-term health and extensive lifespan of fish fed diets that have been optimized for koi. How many of us on this NG are going to still be here 100 years from now? If they live 75 years instead of 100 years I'll be happy. :-) My OPINION is that keeping five koi on a diet optimized for health and longevity is preferable to keeping fifty koi on cheap catfish and trout chow. And you're entitled to that opinion as those of us who use these cheaper feeds are entitled to ours. I don't think I'll be too concerned about my koi even 50 years from now. -- Koi-Lo.... frugal ponding since 1995... Aquariums since 1952 My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 rec.pond's FAQ are at: http://www.geocities.com/justinm090/faq.html ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#54
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veeeery interesting. this dying "with no apparent reason" makes me NUTS. last 2 koi
died 3-4 years ago when I did the "post" on the freshest one all I found was wrong colored eggs ... meaning possible bacterial infection. that is when I netted over the veggie filter so the birds couldnt bathe in there. I dont think I have any fish left from my first batch of koi... the ones I fed crap rancid trout chow to before I learned better. I feel so bad about losing my first koi, raised em mostly in a 55 gallon tank. they were very friendly when they went into the pond. Ingrid "G Pearce" wrote: Cancer is what my cat (mentioned above in thread) had and eventually died from, we used to feed our cats Purina brand food. Purina seems to have a lot of corn in all of their different pet foods. We are now feeding them Iams Multi Cat ("corn grits" are listed as 3rd ingredient) Getting back to the fish, when I started ponding 13 yrs ago, I was using Purina Trout Chow -1st ingredient, I believe was corn, but I think it was all the fish byproducts and oils that were the problem - my 1st 2 koi went from 3" to 18" in 3 yrs and died with no visible problems. The 3rd koi from that group died the following year of nothing visible other than it went totally blind When I started to ask around as to why, I was directed to a koi farm to ask . The first question was "what are you feeding them?" With the Purina Trout Chow answer, the koi breeder asked me how long do I think I would live if I ate at McDonalds 3 meals / day, 7 days a week. He said they use some trout chow sparingly to put some size on their koi until their first cull, then high quality food to bring out the colours and for health. He also said the "Chow" was formulated for trout, catfish and salmon farms to get the fish large enough for market as quickly as possible, typically 13 months. The effect it has on their internal organs is of no interest to them jme Gale :~) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/ sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?...s=Group+lookup www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold website. I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan |
#55
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Koi-Lo wrote:
"Altum" wrote in message . net... Koi-Lo wrote: Everyone has an opinion worth hearing. I doubt you realize it, but that's an incredibly condescending statement. You are confusing opinion with the science that Ingrid and I are trying to present. It's not condescending. It's the truth. Everyone's opinion is worth hearing. This isn't a communist country. :-)) Science? Have you any peer reviewed studies done on koi and their feeding here in the USA? Studies done with control groups and by people with no vested interest in any feed company in any way? I honestly looked on the net months ago and came up with nothing. Nothing but anecdotes and the glowing claims made by those selling such products. If you choose to wear blinders and not read veterinary articles and aquaculture literature that's your choice. If you did, you would learn that trout chow and catfish chow are developed for aquacultured trout and catfish, not pet koi. And yet koi thrive and reproduce on these feeds and I was unable to find anything ... see above. They are designed to provide the cheapest possible food that provides short-term health, rapid growth, and palatable flesh when the fish reaches someone's dinner table. That's not the usual goal for pet fish. I'm sure your fish are fine, but they're not likely to have the same long-term health and extensive lifespan of fish fed diets that have been optimized for koi. How many of us on this NG are going to still be here 100 years from now? If they live 75 years instead of 100 years I'll be happy. :-) My OPINION is that keeping five koi on a diet optimized for health and longevity is preferable to keeping fifty koi on cheap catfish and trout chow. And you're entitled to that opinion as those of us who use these cheaper feeds are entitled to ours. I don't think I'll be too concerned about my koi even 50 years from now. Sorry. I totally misunderstood. At the risk of turning this into the thread that won't die...I typed "aquaculture koi carp diet" into Google Scholar and a bunch of stuff came up. I don't have time to try to go through the searches, but maybe there are some unbiased studies. I'm GLAD your fish are healthy. I tend to fawn over my pets, perhaps a bit too much. They probably eat better than I do. ;-) -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
#56
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![]() wrote in message ... I dont think I have any fish left from my first batch of koi... the ones I fed crap rancid trout chow to before I learned better. ======= Even the $10 a lb koi chow can be rancid when you buy it depending on how it was handled between the place where it was made and your fish. I think it's fair to warn people to CHECK for rancidity no matter what the food costs. Price is no guarantee it was handled correctly before you purchase it. Since you evidently can prove it was rancid but you were unable to detect the rancidity for some reason, I assume you sued the feed co. for at least the value of your fish. -- Koi-Lo.... frugal ponding since 1995... Aquariums since 1952 My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#57
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On Fri, 7 Apr 2006 15:47:52 -0500, "Koi-Lo" wrote:
Have you any peer reviewed studies done on koi and their feeding here in the USA? See www.akca.org click on menu, click on Koi Health Advisor, click on KHA Nutrition. I will check with him to see if he knows of any "studies". ~ jan ----------------- (Do you know where your water quality is?) |
#58
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![]() "~ janj" wrote in message ... On Fri, 7 Apr 2006 15:47:52 -0500, "Koi-Lo" wrote: Have you any peer reviewed studies done on koi and their feeding here in the USA? See www.akca.org click on menu, click on Koi Health Advisor, click on KHA Nutrition. Thanks, I saved it (the PDF) and hope to read it tomorrow. I will check with him to see if he knows of any "studies". ~ jan -- Koi-Lo.... frugal ponding since 1995... Aquariums since 1952 My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 rec.pond's FAQ are at: http://www.geocities.com/justinm090/faq.html ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#59
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Excuse me Ingird,
Who, are saying these things. Documentation, pLease. As some one who keeps up with that is going on in the Aquaculture world, I have seen nothing of your claims. Plus I don't know of any product that is corn based (dog or fish), except one (for fish), and that is not easily available to the general public, you would have to know about it an go out of your way to purchase it, so that is probably not the case. Most corn products that are put into fish foods are corn glutein, which is high in protein and easily assimulated by fish and is very good for fish. So please, tell us of the research and/or documenation that supports what you have said about the liver problems, etc. Tom L.L. |
#60
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KOI-Lo
You may want to look to see if you have a Purina dealer in your area and if they will special order you some of the Purina AquaMax brand of fish food for your stock. It is an excellent food, although it is a little more expensive that regular catfish foods, around here it runs about $26 dollars for 50 poounds. I have not bought any this year, so don't know if there is a price increase, but figure there will be an increase in price. Fuel prices affect everything. If comes in in all sizes from powder to pellets, with some floating and sinking varieties. I get the sinking crumbles because I have only Goldfish. The AquaMax is a high protein food, but with the fish eating plant materials in the ponds during the summer it is good choice. I still buy Sho-Gold and feed it off and on through out the summer for variety. Tom L.L. |
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