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#1
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Looking on the 'net (very dangerous trying to diagnose things on the
'net) but the description seems to follow exactly the fishes behaviour ie lying on the bottom but swimming OK when disturbed as to a fluke burden am thinking off getting fluke tabs tomorrow does this sound about right to the members of this group? Yes I know the tank is far too small for two goldfish (5 GL) but realistically there is no chance of getting a bigger tank. I tried to tell the wife that two was too many (indeed it is to small for one goldfish) but she would not listen. -- This post contains no hidden meanings, no implications and certainly no hidden agendas so it should be taken at face value. The wrong words may be used this is due to my limitations with the English language . |
#2
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![]() "soup" wrote in message ... Looking on the 'net (very dangerous trying to diagnose things on the 'net) but the description seems to follow exactly the fishes behaviour ie lying on the bottom but swimming OK when disturbed as to a fluke burden am thinking off getting fluke tabs tomorrow does this sound about right to the members of this group? It's hard to diagnose over the net or a telephone. Is the fish scraping itself against things or trying to stay near an filter exhaust hose, fall where the oxygen is the highest? You can use Clout as it's an excellent product and it works for several parasites. It's one of the best in my opinion and safe when used as directed. Yes I know the tank is far too small for two goldfish (5 GL) but realistically there is no chance of getting a bigger tank. I tried to tell the wife that two was too many (indeed it is to small for one goldfish) but she would not listen. If all she allows you to have is a 5g tank I would treat these fish for parasites if you believe that's what they have, then find a home for them. A GF will outgrow even a 10g tank in months if well cared for. There are small fish you can replace them with such as a few tetras or guppies. -- Koi-Lo.... frugal ponding since 1995... Aquariums since 1952 My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://bellsouthpwp.net/s/h/shastadaisy Troll Information: http://members.aol.com/intwg/trolls.htm Reading Headers: http://www.technomom.com/writing/headers.shtml ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#3
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Koi-lo wrote:
If all she allows you to have is a 5g tank I would treat these fish for parasites if you believe that's what they have, then find a home for them. A GF will outgrow even a 10g tank in months if well cared for. There are small fish you can replace them with such as a few tetras or guppies. It is not so much what she will allow it is what I have access to, it is not really my set-up rather it is my son's I greped the 'net and all sorts before we had got any fish and the 10 Gl per fish seemed to be the quoted figure for GF, so I told her off this but she wouldn't listen to me (shades of her remembering a bowl with a fish in it). Have just noticed too that the fish in question has a yellowish tint and its fins seem to have quite a bit of yellow in them, would this be connected, or are the two not connected, this yellowishness just being its mature colour? Will treating for flukes harm the fish if they do not have them? Behaviour seems to agree with description on the 'net but I am no expert, obviously I will talk to the chap(ess) at the aquarium shop tommorow,but these people TEND (oh no looking for specialist advice on a Saturday) to only want to make a sale so may not get the best advice. -- This post contains no hidden meanings, no implications and certainly no hidden agendas so it should be taken at face value. The wrong words may be used this is due to my limitations with the English language . |
#4
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![]() "soup" wrote in message k... It is not so much what she will allow it is what I have access to, it is not really my set-up rather it is my son's I greped the 'net and all sorts before we had got any fish and the 10 Gl per fish seemed to be the quoted figure for GF, so I told her off this but she wouldn't listen to me (shades of her remembering a bowl with a fish in it). But why would she care what size tank you purchased for you son? I guess you lost me here. Have just noticed too that the fish in question has a yellowish tint and its fins seem to have quite a bit of yellow in them, would this be connected, or are the two not connected, this yellowishness just being its mature colour? I don't see that as being connected. How long do you have these fish? Have you been doing partial water changes? Have you checked the water for ammonia and nitrites? What is the PH? Could your son have been overfeeding them? Will treating for flukes harm the fish if they do not have them? No, but that may NOT be the problem here. How long has this tank been set up? Behaviour seems to agree with description on the 'net but I am no expert, obviously I will talk to the chap(ess) at the aquarium shop tommorow,but these people TEND (oh no looking for specialist advice on a Saturday) to only want to make a sale so may not get the best advice. You'll find a lot of that on the net as well. Please answer the questions above so we can better help you. Have you used dechlorinators when you do the partial water changes to deactivate chlorine and chloramines? -- Koi-Lo.... frugal ponding since 1995... Aquariums since 1952 My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://bellsouthpwp.net/s/h/shastadaisy Troll Information: http://members.aol.com/intwg/trolls.htm Reading Headers: http://www.technomom.com/writing/headers.shtml ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#5
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Koi-lo wrote:
But why would she care what size tank you purchased for you son? I guess you lost me here. I didn't buy the tank it was given to him as a christmas (2004) present, this one :- http://www.hagen.com/canada/english/...13061001100 1 or if that mucks up in the wrapping http://tinyurl.com/as3zw I don't see that as being connected. How long do you have these fish? Fish we have had for about a year. . Have you been doing partial water changes? Have been changing 40% of the water every one to two weeks (usually more towards the two weeks) always with water that has been treated Have you checked the water for ammonia and nitrites? What is the PH? Don't know the levels but have done nothing different lately and the fish are usually fine Could your son have been overfeeding them? .. Doubt it (unless he sneaks them food in the middle of the night) , he doesn't do anything to them at all, after the "flush" of the first couple of weeks, he basically has nothing to do with them at all No, but that may NOT be the problem here. How long has this tank been set up? About a year. Have you used dechlorinators when you do the partial water changes to deactivate chlorine and chloramines? Yup and water is left in a bucket for roughly a day to allow it to come to room temperature and to give the "safe guard" (a dechlorinator) time to work. -- This post contains no hidden meanings, no implications and certainly no hidden agendas so it should be taken at face value. The wrong words may be used this is due to my limitations with the English language . |
#6
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![]() "soup" wrote in message k... Koi-lo wrote: But why would she care what size tank you purchased for you son? I guess you lost me here. I didn't buy the tank it was given to him as a christmas (2004) present, this one :- http://www.hagen.com/canada/english/...13061001100 1 or if that mucks up in the wrapping http://tinyurl.com/as3zw I don't see that as being connected. How long do you have these fish? Fish we have had for about a year. . Have you been doing partial water changes? Have been changing 40% of the water every one to two weeks (usually more towards the two weeks) always with water that has been treated Have you checked the water for ammonia and nitrites? What is the PH? Don't know the levels but have done nothing different lately and the fish are usually fine Could your son have been overfeeding them? . Doubt it (unless he sneaks them food in the middle of the night) , he doesn't do anything to them at all, after the "flush" of the first couple of weeks, he basically has nothing to do with them at all No, but that may NOT be the problem here. How long has this tank been set up? About a year. Have you used dechlorinators when you do the partial water changes to deactivate chlorine and chloramines? Yup and water is left in a bucket for roughly a day to allow it to come to room temperature and to give the "safe guard" (a dechlorinator) time to work. -- This post contains no hidden meanings, no implications and certainly no hidden agendas so it should be taken at face value. The wrong words may be used this is due to my limitations with the English language . ==================== Going over the whole thread I doubt it's a parasitic problem since you had the fish for a year. I will say that sometimes with the best of care they still sicken and die. Like people and all other life forms, not all will live. I recently had a golden moor goldfish that was thriving and growing suddenly isolate itself, and quickly die. It had no obvious signs of parasites or injury, no gravel stuck in it's throat, ... no reason I could find. It just went..... I'm sorry but still don't understand why your mate would object to replacing this small tank with a larger one knowing they will surly die if you don't. If you plan to keep these fish you will need at the minimum a 20Long tank. If a larger tank is out of the question for whatever reason, then I would start looking for a home for them...... -- Koi-Lo.... frugal ponding since 1995... Aquariums since 1952 My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://bellsouthpwp.net/s/h/shastadaisy Troll Information: http://members.aol.com/intwg/trolls.htm Reading Headers: http://www.technomom.com/writing/headers.shtml ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#7
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OK.. it is better for the fish to test for nitrates and keep it at or below 20 ppm.
after a couple weeks it will be evident how much water changes need to be done. the cheap flake food typically sold for fish is mostly waste, that is grains that go into the fish and come out without digestion. this fouls the water as the organics are broken down by bacteria. OTOH, most people waaaay overfeed their fish. GF normally "graze" on itty bitty critters all day long. If they get a big meal the food goes thru their short intestines too fast to break it all down and too much of the meal comes out not completely digested which means more organics. one of the reasons there is a 10 gallon per GF recommendation is that is the volume of water needed to keep nitrates at 20 ppm with once weekly water changes if high quality and less of the food is fed. water that spikes above 20 ppm more than once a week means: too little water, too much fish, too much food, and, fouled gravel or filter. if the gravel or filter is loaded with wastes it will put too much breakdown into the tank water. Ingrid "soup" wrote: Have been changing 40% of the water every one to two weeks (usually more towards the two weeks) always with water that has been treated Could your son have been overfeeding them? . Doubt it (unless he sneaks them food in the middle of the night) , he doesn't do anything to them at all, after the "flush" of the first couple of weeks, he basically has nothing to do with them at all ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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 money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the recommendations I make. AND I DID NOT AUTHORIZE ADS AT THE OLD PUREGOLD SITE |
#8
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soup wrote:
Will treating for flukes harm the fish if they do not have them? Behaviour seems to agree with description on the 'net but I am no expert, obviously I will talk to the chap(ess) at the aquarium shop tommorow,but these people TEND (oh no looking for specialist advice on a Saturday) to only want to make a sale so may not get the best advice. Congratulations on keeping the fish healthy for so long! It's also heart-warming that you have the interest and caring nature to want to keep the fish healthy. I'll repeat that I don't think chemicals are the answer. Healthy water and food, enough room, general lack of stress... these things help maintain a strong immune system in the fish that can ward off parasites. Where would your parasites have come from? If they came in with the fish a year ago and are now causing a problem it may be because as the fish became bigger they produced more waste and are now crowded, stressed and beginning to have problems. In addition to being toxic in themselves, fish "medicines" can adversely affect your biological filter. That would lead to ammonia, a mini-cycle, more stress... Just go with the water changes (my vote). I wish you the best with your fish! Steve |
#9
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Medication can be very detrimental and as others said, kill the biofilter. One way
of treating fish is "dips". http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/d...m#peroxide_dip this is a dip for flukes that is very mild but effective but yellowishness is a symptom of oodinium http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/d...e.htm#Oodinium quick cure is somewhat less toxic overall, but by no means mild. be sure to change water during the treatment, keep nitrates as low as possible. one way to deal with treatments is the tub to tub method rather than putting the medications into the tank. http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/d...htm#TUB_TO_TUB Ingrid "soup" wrote: Have just noticed too that the fish in question has a yellowish tint and its fins seem to have quite a bit of yellow in them, would this be connected, or are the two not connected, this yellowishness just being its mature colour? Will treating for flukes harm the fish if they do not have them? Behaviour seems to agree with description on the 'net but I am no expert, obviously I will talk to the chap(ess) at the aquarium shop tommorow,but these people TEND (oh no looking for specialist advice on a Saturday) to only want to make a sale so may not get the best advice. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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 money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the recommendations I make. AND I DID NOT AUTHORIZE ADS AT THE OLD PUREGOLD SITE |
#10
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soup wrote:
Looking on the 'net (very dangerous trying to diagnose things on the 'net) but the description seems to follow exactly the fishes behaviour ie lying on the bottom but swimming OK when disturbed as to a fluke burden am thinking off getting fluke tabs tomorrow does this sound about right to the members of this group? Yes I know the tank is far too small for two goldfish (5 GL) but realistically there is no chance of getting a bigger tank. I tried to tell the wife that two was too many (indeed it is to small for one goldfish) but she would not listen. I would recommend against using medications of any kind. They just stress the fish more and can lead to death, in my experience. Ok, if the fish's living circumstances were great and you had real evidence of a particular parasite or other pathogen then ok, you might treat with exactly the right stuff. Dr Solo's (Ingrid's) site is good for goldfish information. Just do partial (~30%) water changes every couple of days - perhaps daily at first, to get your water back into shape. Keep the filter clean but only use tank water to clean it and re-use the media (retains good bacteria). And get a bigger aquarium. A bare 20 gallon aquarium (long type is better) may only cost $20 or $30 US, and hopefully you can re-use your existing filter. Add some cheap, live "bunch" plants if there's daylight. If you need a top to keep the cat out that'll cost a bit more but there are home-made solutions. Good luck! Fish actually are fun ![]() Steve |
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