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#1
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Hi. If you recall I wrote about a week ago with my koi hiding and dying.
Some of you suggested nitrite poisoning, which made sense, and when I tested the water, the nitrites were high. I have been doing water changes, adding salt, firing up the pump and filter, added 2 more airstones, etc. and the water tests fine now. Unfortunately, I lost 4 of my very large, "been with me from the start" koi. I still break down and cry a lot, especially when I'm out working on the pond, and most people think I'm nuts, but I knew people here could relate - they were my "babies", I raised them from only a couple of inches long, they ate out of my hand, followed me around the pond, etc. Of course a part of it is the guilt - I feel as if I killed them or let them down. But anyway, sorry for the venting, here are my real questions: why is it I still have quite a few small fish and koi fry that survived, and only the big ones didn't make it? I thought it would be the other way around with nitrite poisoning. And secondly, I still need to know WHY I had a nitrite problem this winter - it's never happened before. It would be easier to deal with this and prevent it from ever happening again if I knew WHAT I was dealing with. Thanks for letting me vent - nice to know there's a place where I can cry over fish and not feel like a fool. Sue |
#2
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![]() Sorry for your loss. They become so sentimental dont they? The Nitrite build-up was just a natural process, maybe your pond had alot of dead vegetation and as soon as the temps starting rising then so did the Nitrite, if your filter was not running or maybe overloaded already it did not have the ability to convert the nitrites fast enough. Maybe next year you should turn your filters on sooner. Has your fish population increased at all, this could also be the culprit. Maybe you should invest in or build another filter with more bio surface area. HTH -- **So long, and thanks for all the fish!** "SueAndHerZoo" wrote in message news:MUT9c.2098$9g.1660@lakeread04... Hi. If you recall I wrote about a week ago with my koi hiding and dying. Some of you suggested nitrite poisoning, which made sense, and when I tested the water, the nitrites were high. I have been doing water changes, adding salt, firing up the pump and filter, added 2 more airstones, etc. and the water tests fine now. Unfortunately, I lost 4 of my very large, "been with me from the start" koi. I still break down and cry a lot, especially when I'm out working on the pond, and most people think I'm nuts, but I knew people here could relate - they were my "babies", I raised them from only a couple of inches long, they ate out of my hand, followed me around the pond, etc. Of course a part of it is the guilt - I feel as if I killed them or let them down. But anyway, sorry for the venting, here are my real questions: why is it I still have quite a few small fish and koi fry that survived, and only the big ones didn't make it? I thought it would be the other way around with nitrite poisoning. And secondly, I still need to know WHY I had a nitrite problem this winter - it's never happened before. It would be easier to deal with this and prevent it from ever happening again if I knew WHAT I was dealing with. Thanks for letting me vent - nice to know there's a place where I can cry over fish and not feel like a fool. Sue |
#3
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![]() Sorry for your loss. They become so sentimental dont they? The Nitrite build-up was just a natural process, maybe your pond had alot of dead vegetation and as soon as the temps starting rising then so did the Nitrite, if your filter was not running or maybe overloaded already it did not have the ability to convert the nitrites fast enough. Maybe next year you should turn your filters on sooner. Has your fish population increased at all, this could also be the culprit. Maybe you should invest in or build another filter with more bio surface area. HTH -- **So long, and thanks for all the fish!** "SueAndHerZoo" wrote in message news:MUT9c.2098$9g.1660@lakeread04... Hi. If you recall I wrote about a week ago with my koi hiding and dying. Some of you suggested nitrite poisoning, which made sense, and when I tested the water, the nitrites were high. I have been doing water changes, adding salt, firing up the pump and filter, added 2 more airstones, etc. and the water tests fine now. Unfortunately, I lost 4 of my very large, "been with me from the start" koi. I still break down and cry a lot, especially when I'm out working on the pond, and most people think I'm nuts, but I knew people here could relate - they were my "babies", I raised them from only a couple of inches long, they ate out of my hand, followed me around the pond, etc. Of course a part of it is the guilt - I feel as if I killed them or let them down. But anyway, sorry for the venting, here are my real questions: why is it I still have quite a few small fish and koi fry that survived, and only the big ones didn't make it? I thought it would be the other way around with nitrite poisoning. And secondly, I still need to know WHY I had a nitrite problem this winter - it's never happened before. It would be easier to deal with this and prevent it from ever happening again if I knew WHAT I was dealing with. Thanks for letting me vent - nice to know there's a place where I can cry over fish and not feel like a fool. Sue |
#4
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On Mon, 29 Mar 2004 06:38:23 -0500, "SueAndHerZoo"
wrote: It would be easier to deal with this and prevent it from ever happening again if I knew WHAT I was dealing with. I'm sorry to hear about your losing fish, but unless you sent a dead one to a lab and found out exactly what killed it, I don't believe anyone here can tell you why it died. It may well have been a number of things not mentioned here that killed your fish and nothing you could have done to change that. We all provide the best conditions we can for our fish and hope for the best, but some die in spite of our efforts. Regards, Hal |
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On Mon, 29 Mar 2004 06:38:23 -0500, "SueAndHerZoo"
wrote: It would be easier to deal with this and prevent it from ever happening again if I knew WHAT I was dealing with. I'm sorry to hear about your losing fish, but unless you sent a dead one to a lab and found out exactly what killed it, I don't believe anyone here can tell you why it died. It may well have been a number of things not mentioned here that killed your fish and nothing you could have done to change that. We all provide the best conditions we can for our fish and hope for the best, but some die in spite of our efforts. Regards, Hal |
#6
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Sorry Sue. It hurts to lose them, especially the ones you've had a long
time. As to why you lost fish this year, there are several possibilities. One - they grew. You may not have any more fish in number, but if their total length was factored in due to their growth, it's the equivalent of adding more fish. One 18" fish requires a whole lot more than 3 6" fish. As to why you lost the larger ones, that's classic oxygen deficiency. Especially if you found them dead in the morning. Smaller fish have less oxygen demand, so they can handle the shortage better, which is one of the few times that smaller fish have it better than larger ones (it's normally the other way around: larger fish are stronger). NitrItes are resultant from the filters kicking back in: ammonia -- nitrIte -- nitrAte. You can use ammonia binders to protect the fish from that, so you get a Zero ammonia reading, but the filter is still processing it. The next step is the nitrIte, then nitrAte. Usually nitrIte poisoning can be controlled with salt - as little as .15 ppm will avoid brown blood disease. I don't think your larger fish died from nitrItes. It was probably oxygen deficiency - or perhaps something else. NitrItes also damage the gills - little fish have less gill surface and will show the effects more quickly. They're still alive. Keep the airstones going: I've never heard of a fish that died from too much oxygen in its water, but I've known plenty that died from too little. It can only help. Again, sorry for the loss of your babies. It hurts. Lee "SueAndHerZoo" wrote in message news:MUT9c.2098$9g.1660@lakeread04... Hi. If you recall I wrote about a week ago with my koi hiding and dying. Some of you suggested nitrite poisoning, which made sense, and when I tested the water, the nitrites were high. I have been doing water changes, adding salt, firing up the pump and filter, added 2 more airstones, etc. and the water tests fine now. Unfortunately, I lost 4 of my very large, "been with me from the start" koi. I still break down and cry a lot, especially when I'm out working on the pond, and most people think I'm nuts, but I knew people here could relate - they were my "babies", I raised them from only a couple of inches long, they ate out of my hand, followed me around the pond, etc. Of course a part of it is the guilt - I feel as if I killed them or let them down. But anyway, sorry for the venting, here are my real questions: why is it I still have quite a few small fish and koi fry that survived, and only the big ones didn't make it? I thought it would be the other way around with nitrite poisoning. And secondly, I still need to know WHY I had a nitrite problem this winter - it's never happened before. It would be easier to deal with this and prevent it from ever happening again if I knew WHAT I was dealing with. Thanks for letting me vent - nice to know there's a place where I can cry over fish and not feel like a fool. Sue |
#7
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Sorry Sue. It hurts to lose them, especially the ones you've had a long
time. As to why you lost fish this year, there are several possibilities. One - they grew. You may not have any more fish in number, but if their total length was factored in due to their growth, it's the equivalent of adding more fish. One 18" fish requires a whole lot more than 3 6" fish. As to why you lost the larger ones, that's classic oxygen deficiency. Especially if you found them dead in the morning. Smaller fish have less oxygen demand, so they can handle the shortage better, which is one of the few times that smaller fish have it better than larger ones (it's normally the other way around: larger fish are stronger). NitrItes are resultant from the filters kicking back in: ammonia -- nitrIte -- nitrAte. You can use ammonia binders to protect the fish from that, so you get a Zero ammonia reading, but the filter is still processing it. The next step is the nitrIte, then nitrAte. Usually nitrIte poisoning can be controlled with salt - as little as .15 ppm will avoid brown blood disease. I don't think your larger fish died from nitrItes. It was probably oxygen deficiency - or perhaps something else. NitrItes also damage the gills - little fish have less gill surface and will show the effects more quickly. They're still alive. Keep the airstones going: I've never heard of a fish that died from too much oxygen in its water, but I've known plenty that died from too little. It can only help. Again, sorry for the loss of your babies. It hurts. Lee "SueAndHerZoo" wrote in message news:MUT9c.2098$9g.1660@lakeread04... Hi. If you recall I wrote about a week ago with my koi hiding and dying. Some of you suggested nitrite poisoning, which made sense, and when I tested the water, the nitrites were high. I have been doing water changes, adding salt, firing up the pump and filter, added 2 more airstones, etc. and the water tests fine now. Unfortunately, I lost 4 of my very large, "been with me from the start" koi. I still break down and cry a lot, especially when I'm out working on the pond, and most people think I'm nuts, but I knew people here could relate - they were my "babies", I raised them from only a couple of inches long, they ate out of my hand, followed me around the pond, etc. Of course a part of it is the guilt - I feel as if I killed them or let them down. But anyway, sorry for the venting, here are my real questions: why is it I still have quite a few small fish and koi fry that survived, and only the big ones didn't make it? I thought it would be the other way around with nitrite poisoning. And secondly, I still need to know WHY I had a nitrite problem this winter - it's never happened before. It would be easier to deal with this and prevent it from ever happening again if I knew WHAT I was dealing with. Thanks for letting me vent - nice to know there's a place where I can cry over fish and not feel like a fool. Sue |
#8
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Thank you Happy Camper, Hal, and Lee . . . I really do feel better after
reading your kind words. It's so comforting to know that there are other people who really feel the loss of "just fish". I was getting teary-eyed at the office this morning when someone asked me how my pond was doing (a thoughtful question from someone I hadn't seen since last spring) and the lady who sits nearby shouted out "I don't know about her pond, but SHE needs to get a life - she's actually upset about some of her fish dying!" It's not even worth trying to explain to people like that what they don't know. Anyway, you all had great thoughts on the topic, and as tempted as I was to answer "no, fish population was pretty much the same", that's absolutely not true since they all had grown bigger. Just as an added note, the dead fish did not die in a pretty state. They all had blood in their fins and some areas of their bodies, and the fins were all frayed and tattered looking. Yes, next year I will start the pump earlier, add airstones earlier, and hope to heck winter ENDS earlier next year! Thanks again. Sue "Lee B." wrote in message ... Sorry Sue. It hurts to lose them, especially the ones you've had a long time. As to why you lost fish this year, there are several possibilities. One - they grew. You may not have any more fish in number, but if their total length was factored in due to their growth, it's the equivalent of adding more fish. One 18" fish requires a whole lot more than 3 6" fish. As to why you lost the larger ones, that's classic oxygen deficiency. Especially if you found them dead in the morning. Smaller fish have less oxygen demand, so they can handle the shortage better, which is one of the few times that smaller fish have it better than larger ones (it's normally the other way around: larger fish are stronger). NitrItes are resultant from the filters kicking back in: ammonia -- nitrIte -- nitrAte. You can use ammonia binders to protect the fish from that, so you get a Zero ammonia reading, but the filter is still processing it. The next step is the nitrIte, then nitrAte. Usually nitrIte poisoning can be controlled with salt - as little as .15 ppm will avoid brown blood disease. I don't think your larger fish died from nitrItes. It was probably oxygen deficiency - or perhaps something else. NitrItes also damage the gills - little fish have less gill surface and will show the effects more quickly. They're still alive. Keep the airstones going: I've never heard of a fish that died from too much oxygen in its water, but I've known plenty that died from too little. It can only help. Again, sorry for the loss of your babies. It hurts. Lee "SueAndHerZoo" wrote in message news:MUT9c.2098$9g.1660@lakeread04... Hi. If you recall I wrote about a week ago with my koi hiding and dying. Some of you suggested nitrite poisoning, which made sense, and when I tested the water, the nitrites were high. I have been doing water changes, adding salt, firing up the pump and filter, added 2 more airstones, etc. and the water tests fine now. Unfortunately, I lost 4 of my very large, "been with me from the start" koi. I still break down and cry a lot, especially when I'm out working on the pond, and most people think I'm nuts, but I knew people here could relate - they were my "babies", I raised them from only a couple of inches long, they ate out of my hand, followed me around the pond, etc. Of course a part of it is the guilt - I feel as if I killed them or let them down. But anyway, sorry for the venting, here are my real questions: why is it I still have quite a few small fish and koi fry that survived, and only the big ones didn't make it? I thought it would be the other way around with nitrite poisoning. And secondly, I still need to know WHY I had a nitrite problem this winter - it's never happened before. It would be easier to deal with this and prevent it from ever happening again if I knew WHAT I was dealing with. Thanks for letting me vent - nice to know there's a place where I can cry over fish and not feel like a fool. Sue |
#9
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Thank you Happy Camper, Hal, and Lee . . . I really do feel better after
reading your kind words. It's so comforting to know that there are other people who really feel the loss of "just fish". I was getting teary-eyed at the office this morning when someone asked me how my pond was doing (a thoughtful question from someone I hadn't seen since last spring) and the lady who sits nearby shouted out "I don't know about her pond, but SHE needs to get a life - she's actually upset about some of her fish dying!" It's not even worth trying to explain to people like that what they don't know. Anyway, you all had great thoughts on the topic, and as tempted as I was to answer "no, fish population was pretty much the same", that's absolutely not true since they all had grown bigger. Just as an added note, the dead fish did not die in a pretty state. They all had blood in their fins and some areas of their bodies, and the fins were all frayed and tattered looking. Yes, next year I will start the pump earlier, add airstones earlier, and hope to heck winter ENDS earlier next year! Thanks again. Sue "Lee B." wrote in message ... Sorry Sue. It hurts to lose them, especially the ones you've had a long time. As to why you lost fish this year, there are several possibilities. One - they grew. You may not have any more fish in number, but if their total length was factored in due to their growth, it's the equivalent of adding more fish. One 18" fish requires a whole lot more than 3 6" fish. As to why you lost the larger ones, that's classic oxygen deficiency. Especially if you found them dead in the morning. Smaller fish have less oxygen demand, so they can handle the shortage better, which is one of the few times that smaller fish have it better than larger ones (it's normally the other way around: larger fish are stronger). NitrItes are resultant from the filters kicking back in: ammonia -- nitrIte -- nitrAte. You can use ammonia binders to protect the fish from that, so you get a Zero ammonia reading, but the filter is still processing it. The next step is the nitrIte, then nitrAte. Usually nitrIte poisoning can be controlled with salt - as little as .15 ppm will avoid brown blood disease. I don't think your larger fish died from nitrItes. It was probably oxygen deficiency - or perhaps something else. NitrItes also damage the gills - little fish have less gill surface and will show the effects more quickly. They're still alive. Keep the airstones going: I've never heard of a fish that died from too much oxygen in its water, but I've known plenty that died from too little. It can only help. Again, sorry for the loss of your babies. It hurts. Lee "SueAndHerZoo" wrote in message news:MUT9c.2098$9g.1660@lakeread04... Hi. If you recall I wrote about a week ago with my koi hiding and dying. Some of you suggested nitrite poisoning, which made sense, and when I tested the water, the nitrites were high. I have been doing water changes, adding salt, firing up the pump and filter, added 2 more airstones, etc. and the water tests fine now. Unfortunately, I lost 4 of my very large, "been with me from the start" koi. I still break down and cry a lot, especially when I'm out working on the pond, and most people think I'm nuts, but I knew people here could relate - they were my "babies", I raised them from only a couple of inches long, they ate out of my hand, followed me around the pond, etc. Of course a part of it is the guilt - I feel as if I killed them or let them down. But anyway, sorry for the venting, here are my real questions: why is it I still have quite a few small fish and koi fry that survived, and only the big ones didn't make it? I thought it would be the other way around with nitrite poisoning. And secondly, I still need to know WHY I had a nitrite problem this winter - it's never happened before. It would be easier to deal with this and prevent it from ever happening again if I knew WHAT I was dealing with. Thanks for letting me vent - nice to know there's a place where I can cry over fish and not feel like a fool. Sue |
#10
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![]() Ahhhh.....I am so sorry for your loss. I have a 1 1/2 yr. old friendly goldfish i wouldn't take money for, so i understand. Time will heal you. And like you wanted, maybe you can learn and prevent it from happening again. Last year i had thousands of tadpoles that i killed trying to save. It took months to stop feeling guilty. This year i am leaving well enough alone and will watch for stressed fish, then i'll bring them in or something. On Mon, 29 Mar 2004 06:38:23 -0500, "SueAndHerZoo" wrote: Hi. If you recall I wrote about a week ago with my koi hiding and dying. Some of you suggested nitrite poisoning, which made sense, and when I tested the water, the nitrites were high. I have been doing water changes, adding salt, firing up the pump and filter, added 2 more airstones, etc. and the water tests fine now. Unfortunately, I lost 4 of my very large, "been with me from the start" koi. I still break down and cry a lot, especially when I'm out working on the pond, and most people think I'm nuts, but I knew people here could relate - they were my "babies", I raised them from only a couple of inches long, they ate out of my hand, followed me around the pond, etc. Of course a part of it is the guilt - I feel as if I killed them or let them down. But anyway, sorry for the venting, here are my real questions: why is it I still have quite a few small fish and koi fry that survived, and only the big ones didn't make it? I thought it would be the other way around with nitrite poisoning. And secondly, I still need to know WHY I had a nitrite problem this winter - it's never happened before. It would be easier to deal with this and prevent it from ever happening again if I knew WHAT I was dealing with. Thanks for letting me vent - nice to know there's a place where I can cry over fish and not feel like a fool. Sue |
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