A Fishkeeping forum. FishKeepingBanter.com

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » FishKeepingBanter.com forum » ponds » General
Site Map Home Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

re.Koi Food



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old February 24th 07, 02:15 PM posted to rec.ponds
Tristin
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 226
Default re.Koi Food

I guess this means I should stop feeding my cats Rangen koi food then
huh? ;-)
Let me see if I understand this new concept of feeding varioius
species a "like" food.
Cats get cat food such as Wally Wolds SpecialKitty or Purina
Dogs get Old Roys' Doggie food such as Purina or Nutro
Birds get bird seed like Pennington MIx etc
Catfish get Catfish food like Faithways Catfish food
Trout get Trout Chow like Fathways Trout Chow
Koi get Koi food like Faithway Ornamental POnd fosh food,or Rangen


You know that makes perfectly good sence, sinse I always wondered why
a company like Faithway made Trout Chow, Catfish Feed and also
Ornamental Pond Fish food..........if they were all the same except
for the bag why pay 2x more for the pond fish food over trout chow and
also why pay 6 times more over wally worlds catfood. I guess its the
cheap in some folks along with pure ignorance that makes you want to
feed "cheap" foods such as wally world cat foods etc, to koi and
goldies. If you can not afford to do whats necessary and morally right
then I do not think some folks should have the "food" abused critters
in question, so evidently there is physical as well as nutritional
abuse possible......







-------
I forgot more about ponds and koi than I'll ever know!
  #2  
Old February 24th 07, 03:51 PM posted to rec.ponds
Gill Passman
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 240
Default re.Koi Food - OT - has lost its link with the original thread

This message seems to have come detached from the thread that you are
responding to so is a bit confusing......Perhaps, it might be simplest
and make more sense to those of us trying to follow the conversation if
Jan started a new thread and then Tristan (and others) could respond
under the new top....

Just an idea
Gill
  #3  
Old February 24th 07, 07:36 PM posted to rec.ponds
~ jan
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 85
Default re.Koi Food - OT - has lost its link with the original thread

On Sat, 24 Feb 2007 15:51:23 +0000, Gill Passman
wrote:

This message seems to have come detached from the thread that you are
responding to so is a bit confusing......Perhaps, it might be simplest
and make more sense to those of us trying to follow the conversation if
Jan started a new thread and then Tristan (and others) could respond
under the new top....

Just an idea
Gill


I did start a new thread, but Roy messed with the . What's wrong with
you Roy? slap, slap, slap! Oh well. ;-)

I do have a reply to Roy who said something about people shouldn't have
these critters if they aren't gonna feed them right. We have to remember
that dog chow doesn't even have that long a history. People fed their dogs
scraps off the table, right? Someone saw a market and here we be.

I just feel, with what we know today, that we ought to take advantage of
that knowledge. What you feed your own critters is up to you, but what you
recommend to others you ought to do with some integrity, based on recent
studies.

Sho Koi, delivered to my door, runs me less than $5/lb. and I'd save even
more if I could order 50 lbs. of it. Manda Fu, including delivery, runs
$15/throw pillow size bag. It is very light weight, so one can't go by
weight. Probably why it is so easily digested and a great fall/spring food.
~ jan
  #4  
Old February 24th 07, 08:01 PM posted to rec.ponds
Reel McKoi
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 27
Default re.Koi Food - OT - has lost its link with the original thread


"~ jan" wrote in message
...

I do have a reply to Roy who said something about people shouldn't have
these critters if they aren't gonna feed them right. We have to remember
that dog chow doesn't even have that long a history. People fed their dogs
scraps off the table, right? Someone saw a market and here we be.

I just feel, with what we know today, that we ought to take advantage of
that knowledge. What you feed your own critters is up to you, but what you
recommend to others you ought to do with some integrity, based on recent
studies.


I don't recall anyone *recommending* the cheaper feeds. I do recall someone
replying to a poster that they fed the cheaper feeds with total success.
What people feed their fish is up to themselves and what they can afford.
If people were having all kinds of problems with trout and catfish trout
we'd be hearing about it.

Sho Koi, delivered to my door, runs me less than $5/lb. and I'd save even
more if I could order 50 lbs. of it. Manda Fu, including delivery, runs
$15/throw pillow size bag. It is very light weight, so one can't go by
weight. Probably why it is so easily digested and a great fall/spring
food.
~ jan


I haven't seen ShoKoi that cheap anywhere. Where are you getting it?
--
RM....
Frugal ponding since 1995.
rec.ponder since late 1996.
My Pond & Aquarium Pages:
http://tinyurl.com/9do58
Troll free pond and fish Forum:
http://www.karlsforums.com/forums/fo...ay.php?fid=104
~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö ~~~ }(((((o






  #5  
Old February 24th 07, 08:25 PM posted to rec.ponds
~ jan
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 85
Default re.Koi Food - OT - has lost its link with the original thread

On Sat, 24 Feb 2007 14:01:40 -0600, "Reel McKoi"
wrote:

I don't recall anyone *recommending* the cheaper feeds. I do recall someone
replying to a poster that they fed the cheaper feeds with total success.


Just like newsgroups, all kinds go to pond club meetings, and very often
those that speak the loudest are often wrong. Just because they say total
success would need a follow up for me. We use to have such a member... and
we've had members who spout their wonderful cheap DYI filtration systems
also. I tell people go look, look at the filter, look at the pond. Is the
filter an eye sore? Is the pond green or murky? If so, look elsewhere.

What people feed their fish is up to themselves and what they can afford.
If people were having all kinds of problems with trout and catfish trout
we'd be hearing about it.


I have been hearing about it, many of us have mentioned it over the years.
Vets have done necropsies and verified the problems.

I haven't seen ShoKoi that cheap anywhere. Where are you getting it?


http://www.westernpond.com/koi_foods.htm Note that orders over $60 have
free shipping. I usually buy a 10 lb bag and 1 or 2 pounds of Sho Gold for
the goldfish to get the free shipping price. ~ jan
  #6  
Old February 24th 07, 09:24 PM posted to rec.ponds
Gill Passman
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 240
Default re.Koi Food - OT - has lost its link with the original thread

I'm pretty much with Tristan on this one in that food designed for a
certain animal is what the animal/creature should be being fed....yes,
my cat will eat the dog food, the dog will eat the cat food, the cat
will eat the fish food (but a bit cost prohibitive to feed a cat a
couple of cartons of marine flakes twice a day at around £7 a tub - but
useful for hoovering up spillages)....the dog will eat the food I give
my guinea pig and rabbit, the guinea pig and rabbit would eat the wild
bird food I put out - the cat would eat most of whatever is on offer but
I rather fancy the cat would prefer to eat the birds, the guinea pig and
rabbit - lol......haven't tried the fish on the diets of the mammals but
I'm pretty sure they would take it....and I am also pretty sure (with
the exception of giving meat the herbivores) that everyone would put on
weight and grow with whatever mixed up diet I care to give them....but
none would be healthy long term.....

Now it may well be true that one person has success in producing fat,
big fish by feeding them cat/dog food.....but equally most of us in the
Western World have had success in producing big, fat children by feeding
them an inappropriate diet....if we argue that the diets are
inappropriate for the children perhaps it should also be considered that
certain diets are inappropriate for our pets for the same reason.....

Now if the motivation is to get good bucks for fat, large but
potentially unhealthy fish then I guess that this is something we see
all the time in the fish trade...but it doesn't make it right.....

Now, when it comes to fish food.....expensive does not equal
good.....equally cheap doesn't equal the equivalent to other available
foods.....personally I've tried a number of foods (of varying price
tags) for my tank fish.....the conclusion has actually been that the
mid-range food suits better.....but not really because of how the fish
grow, colour etc. etc....but because of the impact on the water
quality......cheap foods contain a lot of bulk that eventually pollutes
the water with nitrates and phosphates, higher priced foods contain a
lot of protein (IME) which equally pollute the water with that rather
nasty oily skim on the surface (I dread to think what a high protein
cat/dog diet does - as afterall cat and dog food is designed to satisfy
the needs of carnivores).....the key is to find the food that suits you,
your environment and your fish.....Fish food suited to the fish is the
starting point....experimentation with it to get the desired results and
maintain the health of your fish is the goal.....feeding food not
designed for the animal in question is a non-starter....

Gill (getting off soap box for an hour or two)



  #7  
Old February 25th 07, 12:42 AM posted to rec.ponds
Reel McKoi
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 27
Default re.Koi Food - OT - has lost its link with the original thread


"~ jan" wrote in message
...
On Sat, 24 Feb 2007 14:01:40 -0600, "Reel McKoi"
wrote:

I don't recall anyone *recommending* the cheaper feeds. I do recall
someone
replying to a poster that they fed the cheaper feeds with total success.


Just like newsgroups, all kinds go to pond club meetings, and very often
those that speak the loudest are often wrong.


Maybe it wasn't wrong for them since they weren't having problems with their
fish. Look at the low-carb diets people are on these days. Some have been
on them for many years and are in perfect health. Others, also in perfect
health are vegetarians who may only eat an occasional egg or fish dinner.

Just because they say total
success would need a follow up for me.


Well,... here's one follow up. My fish have been on the cheaper foods for
years now without a problem. I'm sure there are others here as well,
thought after these debates they're probably afraid to come forward and
discuss their failures or successes.

We use to have such a member... and
we've had members who spout their wonderful cheap DYI filtration systems
also. I tell people go look, look at the filter, look at the pond. Is the
filter an eye sore? Is the pond green or murky? If so, look elsewhere.


Maybe cheap DYI filters are all they can afford. Not everyone has a 6 figure
income.

What people feed their fish is up to themselves and what they can afford.
If people were having all kinds of problems with trout and catfish trout
we'd be hearing about it.


I have been hearing about it, many of us have mentioned it over the years.
Vets have done necropsies and verified the problems.


I haven't seen anyone here mention their vet finding their koi dying do to
feeding trout and catfish chow.

I haven't seen ShoKoi that cheap anywhere. Where are you getting it?


http://www.westernpond.com/koi_foods.htm Note that orders over $60 have
free shipping. I usually buy a 10 lb bag and 1 or 2 pounds of Sho Gold for
the goldfish to get the free shipping price. ~ jan


Well I tried the $5 lb food and was disappointed so.... If I start having
problems with my koi and goldfish I'll look into buying these "rip off"
priced feeds.
--
RM....
Frugal ponding since 1995.
rec.ponder since late 1996.
My Pond & Aquarium Pages:
http://tinyurl.com/9do58
~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö ~~~ }(((((o




  #8  
Old February 25th 07, 12:53 AM posted to rec.ponds
Reel McKoi
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 27
Default re.Koi Food - OT - has lost its link with the original thread


"Gill Passman" wrote in message
...
I'm pretty much with Tristan on this one in that food designed for a
certain animal is what the animal/creature should be being fed....yes, my
cat will eat the dog food, the dog will eat the cat food, the cat will eat
the fish food (but a bit cost prohibitive to feed a cat a couple of
cartons of marine flakes twice a day at around £7 a tub - but useful for
hoovering up spillages)....the dog will eat the food I give my guinea pig
and rabbit, the guinea pig and rabbit would eat the wild bird food I put
out - the cat would eat most of whatever is on offer but I rather fancy
the cat would prefer to eat the birds, the guinea pig and rabbit -
lol......haven't tried the fish on the diets of the mammals but I'm pretty
sure they would take it....and I am also pretty sure (with the exception
of giving meat the herbivores) that everyone would put on weight and grow
with whatever mixed up diet I care to give them....but none would be
healthy long term.....
Now it may well be true that one person has success in producing fat, big
fish by feeding them cat/dog food...

...but equally most of us in the
Western World have had success in producing big, fat children by feeding
them an inappropriate diet...



Not FAT fish. That's overfeeding. Well fleshed is not fat. We have a 4
month winter here so the fish have to carry enough fat to see them through.
By spring they're the perfect weight and breed like crazy. There's a big
difference between fat and well fed - be they children, dogs, gerbils or
fish.

..if we argue that the diets are
inappropriate for the children perhaps it should also be considered that
certain diets are inappropriate for our pets for the same reason.....

Now if the motivation is to get good bucks for fat, large but potentially
unhealthy fish


Don't assume they're unhealthy. Unhealthy fish don't survive 4+ month
winters and breed more fry than their ponds can hold.

then I guess that this is something we see
all the time in the fish trade...but it doesn't make it right.....

Now, when it comes to fish food.....expensive does not equal
good.....equally cheap doesn't equal the equivalent to other available
foods.....personally I've tried a number of foods (of varying price tags)
for my tank fish.....the conclusion has actually been that the mid-range
food suits better.....but not really because of how the fish grow, colour
etc. etc....but because of the impact on the water quality......


Aquarium fish are more limited in the availability of natural foods. My fish
have access to things indoor fish do not.

cheap foods contain a lot of bulk that eventually pollutes
the water with nitrates and phosphates, higher priced foods contain a lot
of protein (IME) which equally pollute the water with that rather nasty
oily skim on the surface (I dread to think what a high protein cat/dog
diet does - as afterall cat and dog food is designed to satisfy the needs
of carnivores).....the key is to find the food that suits you, your
environment and your fish.....Fish food suited to the fish is the starting
point....experimentation with it to get the desired results and maintain
the health of your fish is the goal....


Exactly, and if your fish thrive on trout and catfish chow.... stick with
it. Don't rock the boat or fix something if it isn't broken.

..feeding food not
designed for the animal in question is a non-starter....


So are we to assume you only feed natural foods to your children such as
veggies, fruit and meat? No snacks, no candy, no pie, no bread, no chips,
no milk past weaning... only the natural foods we would find in the wild
that we evolved with and thrive on?

Gill (getting off soap box for an hour or two)

--
RM....
Frugal ponding since 1995.
rec.ponder since late 1996.
My Pond & Aquarium Pages:
http://tinyurl.com/9do58
Troll free pond and fish Forum:
http://www.karlsforums.com/forums/fo...ay.php?fid=104
~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö ~~~ }(((((o





  #9  
Old February 25th 07, 03:32 AM posted to rec.ponds
Phyllis and Jim
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 24
Default re.Koi Food - OT - has lost its link with the original thread

Vets have done necropsies and verified the problems.

Jan,

Are any of their findings available to us?

Jim


  #10  
Old February 25th 07, 04:29 AM posted to rec.ponds
~ jan
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 85
Default re.Koi Food - OT - has lost its link with the original thread

On 24 Feb 2007 19:32:26 -0800, "Phyllis and Jim"
wrote:

Vets have done necropsies and verified the problems.


Jan,

Are any of their findings available to us?

Jim

I'll see if I can find something. ~ jan
 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Storing Dry Fish Food [-=LÈGIÖN=-] General 0 August 7th 06 01:12 AM
Rose anenome splitting TW Reefs 87 April 15th 06 03:04 AM
Just how much food is too much? Ryan Minaker General 8 March 23rd 04 04:10 AM
Purposely sinking food? Jan Sacharuk Goldfish 3 September 27th 03 03:24 PM
Large Flake Food NetMax Cichlids 0 September 7th 03 03:51 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:45 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 FishKeepingBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.