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gold fish feeding 8/21/17
Goldfish Food Help!!! 3/18/15
Re: Update (everything new is in parentheses)
11/10/14 Re: Fancy goldfish, dojo loaches for new 50 gal tank... GF
fdg. f', fluke trt. 5/7/14 Hikari food 1/2/13 Feeding
12/20/11 Goldfish food 12/15/11 Goldfish eating silversides? &
Synodontis beh. 10/19/11 Ranchu and body-mechanical eating
woes 6/30/11 goldfish having trouble eating 3/4/11 Gel food for Fancy Goldfish
11/28/10 black moor, hlth., nutr., a new ploy to urge folks to use
proper English 11/21/10 Red pepper-plus! Food additive/s 5/11/10 Re: At my wits end with little comet -- 3/3/10 Goldfish Cuisine 2/26/10 Automatic feeder for refrigerated food? (RMF, Goldfish
without pigment in their eyes... come across
this?)<<Yes>> 2/16/10 A Teacher's Job is Never Done, FW sys.
maint. 5/16/09 Veggie Clip Use, GF fdg. (also, mixing Fancy Goldfish
varieties) 5/4/2009 Food and health problem 11/07/08 Hello dear
Neale, How are you? Hope so you will be fine there. Neale my two red
caps are eating the live plant but my black moor is not eating that
live plant (Cabomba). What should I do now? Neale I have 2 feet
aquarium of 22 gallon and in which my one red cap is 3.2 inch and one
is 4 inch and black moor is 3 inch. I want to ask that can I introduce
one or two more goldfish with them or not? I feel that my tank is empty
with three of them. Thank you Ali <Hi Ali. Leave the Black Moor
hungry! He will eat the plants eventually! Also try cooked peas,
rice, boiled spinach and other plant foods. He'll eat something
from that list, I'm sure. I would not add any more Goldfish to your
tank. For a start, you've already had problems over the recent
weeks with fish. So it is ALWAYS a good idea to leave the tank running
for a couple of months to see if everything is OK. Also, your SMALL
fish will soon be BIG fish, and better to have 3 happy, healthy
Goldfish than 4 or 5 unhealthy ones! Cheers, Neale.> Goldfish; diet 8/19/08 Hi I have a black moor goldfish a shubunkin and a Oranda in a 36 gallon tank and I wanted to feed carrots and sweet peas for treats a couple times a week should I cook the carrots and peas or right out of the can if I should cook them how should I do it. boil or microwave. Thanks <Tinned peas can be used right out the can; other vegetables should be either zapped in the micro or blanched in boiling water so they're soft but not mushy (if they're too soft, they'll fall apart in the water). Feel free to experiment! If you overcook the carrots or whatever and they go in the filter, no big deal because they contain little protein and won't harm the water quality. Do be sure you read the article on Floaty, Bloaty Goldfish (if you haven't already): http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWsubwebindex/gldfshmalnut.htm Cheers, Neale.>
Anacharis in aquariums, and as food for goldfish 2/29/08 Hi! Just wanted to let you know that Anacharis is no longer being sold in Michigan. It's illegal because of the invasive nature of the plant. I found that out when looking for a good plant to help a year-old goldfish which has developed a swim bladder problem. He was in a pond from spring - fall and did well, but has had problems in the aquarium since then. (I do feed 'sinking' pellets as well as flakes.) So far, Sunkist is the only one who has had tummy troubles, and I'm hoping to keep it that way! So glad I found this website, it has loads of good information! Thanks, Karen <If you can't get hold of Anacharis, then other similar species will do well -- Elodea, Egeria, Cabomba, etc. Plants *are* important for Goldfish, and neglecting this aspect of their diet will end with problems! Other green foods include tinned peas, blanched lettuce (especially curly lettuce), Sushi Nori, etc. Daphnia also work well, and you can buy these frozen as well as live. Pellets and flakes, by themselves, just aren't good enough in the long term. Cheers, Neale.> Mixing Tropical and Goldfish Foods 1/9/08 Dear WetWebMedia, I have a goldfish and some coldwater tropical fish in one tank. I feed a mixture of tropical and goldfish foods. Is it okay if the goldfish eat some tropical by accident and the tropical fish eat of goldfish food by accident, because some sites say that you have to make sure goldfish are eating goldfish food. Thanks! Pierre < Goldfish need more fiber in their diet than other fish. If the goldfish get too much protein and get stressed there is the potential for them to get bloat. The other fish won't grow as fast on the goldfish food.-Chuck> Re: Goldfish Food Vs Regular Fish Food 1/9/08 Thanks for the reply, I just wanted to make sure it was okay if they were eating some of each other's foods. What if I give them other supplements and foods goldfish and the other fish can eat like cooked peas, frozen and freeze-dried brine shrimp and worms, and such? < Feeding your fish a varied diet is a good idea.> Can that give them enough nutrition? The goldfish doesn't look stressed, he has been swimming around happily and isn't afraid of me or anyone else, in fact, I think he knows when he is about to get food. The other fish likes to follow the goldfish around. I believe they are friends since they like each other's company. <Goldfish usually forage around the bottom of tank and get lots of vegetable matter in their diet. Other fish need more meat because they may thrive on a diet of insects instead of the plant matter that the goldfish need. If the goldfish gets too much protein it may plug up the goldfish's long intestinal tract. The goldfish stirs up the bottom of the tank and exposes potential food item for the other fish to eat.-Chuck> Redcap Oranda problem 11/6/07 Hello, I have a red cap Oranda named snookums for about a year now and is quite healthy and just recently ive noticed the large red cap growth has grown to an extent where it covers the top of its head completely. it also has some kind of clear tissue/membrane growth by its cheeks which doesn't look like any disease at all but looks more like parts of its face... my question and concern is that the membrane by its cheeks is slowly growing and beginning to creep near its eyes. what would be the best thing or method to counter that? <Mmm, there are times, folks who advocate some sort of surgical removal... I do not... I would just wait, allow the fish to develop other senses to finding its way about, food...> ive seen a picture of it in a book (cant remember the title) where they would use a scalpel and remove the membrane quickly while the fish is out of the water for a few seconds? <Yes> I know this sounds barbaric, but they mentioned that this is the only thing that can be done to save it. <Can, will adapt as is...> this is exactly what happened to my brothers goldfish until it was too late and the fish couldn't see where it would swim too, then it just stayed in one place helpless... I really don't want this to happen to my fish, so any help would be appreciated. thanks in advance, Ryan <Try to not worry, anthropomorphize... All will likely be fine. Bob Fenner> Goldfish - fussy eaters? 9/20/07 Hi there, My two
Orandas tend to spit out their flake food more often than not so I
changed to pellets but they still spit these out too. Any advice would
be welcome. Thanks. Sue <Hello Sue. Goldfish aren't fussy
feeders, but like any fish they'll get bored with the same food day
in, day out. Flake and pellet foods are, perhaps surprisingly, not even
a particularly good food for them. Raiding the kitchen for green scraps
is actually rather better, as is dumping in some pondweed every couple
of weeks to let them "browse the salad bar" naturally.
Goldfish are, fundamentally, herbivores that feed on algae and decaying
plant material in the wild, so high protein foods like pellets just
aren't necessary -- any more than humans, also largely herbivores
originally, really need t-bone steaks every night! In fact your
goldfish really needs a diet a lot like a perfect human diet: lots of
vegetables and salad, a bit of starch, and a little bit of protein.
There's a nice article on goldfish diet here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshmalnut.htm .
That should give you some ideas of what to try. Mix up their diet, so
every day is different, and you'll soon find your goldies not only
enjoy their food more, but will also be healthier, more active, and
longer lived! Best of all, feeding them greens is cheap 'n'
easy! And if setting aside some greens for your pets encourages you to
eat more greens as well, so much the better! Cheers, Neale. Feeding my fantails, general care ect <no such word... etc>.... sys. 8/30/07 First of I just want to let ya'll know you have a wonderfully helpful website. I've had my fish since march (sons bday present) I have a calico fantail, an orange??? fantail with a black mustache, and a black moor, and two little maybe inch long sucker fish of some sort, not pleckys... <And I do hope not a Chinese Algae Eater... Gyrinocheilus aymonieri... please take the time to search the Net, WWM re... not safe to keep with goldfish> Hopefully living comfortably in a 29 gallon tank, <Four fancy goldfish... will need more room than this in time... I have four in a ninety> that's all i can afford for now, next mission is a 55 gallon... right now i have a veggie clip in their tank that always has lettuce or spinach in it since I am unsuccessful in growing aquarium plants, i feed them aprox 7 peas split in half per day, and flakes <Look into more nutritious pellets... I use Spectrum... with great success> on Sunday only. I don't know specifics on the filter but it is the kind you hang on the back of the tank, and i have a gravel aerator?...I change 30% water once a week, and clean out the gravel w/ water change. <All this sounds good> If it weren't for ya'll I'd be completely fish illiterate, everything in my tank seems to be fine, but they seem kinda lazy, they do swim around and suck on the rocks and drive me nuts but their are periods thru out the day that they just kinda go with the flow, sometimes i wonder if their tank is too warm? <Mmm, this is generally just the nature of goldfish...> would that make them lazy? it stays pretty consistent at 72-76, I don't have a light on their tank, but i wonder if they should be closer to more natural light, they are approx 50 ft from the closest window and get no sun from the back of their tank, besides the little that shows thru from the bathroom. <I would add some simple normal output fluorescent for your viewing pleasure> Ohhh and i wondered about my little orange guy/girl, the dorsal fin seems to have a curve to it... i guess i associated it to captivity cause when i seen it it reminded me of what happens to a whales fin in captivity where it starts to slump over, it can be picked up straight but when she/he is at rest it just kinda slumps over... well i guess all info is more than what i know right now...lol! <Is likely genetic...> thanks for all the great advise <advice> from the site... Keep up the great work ~Briana <Thank you... we're trying. Bob Fenner> Re: Daughter's Goldfish, help... fdg. -- 08/17/07 Well, Thunder looks better and is living higher up in the tank...away from the bottom. There is nothing IN the tank with him, I threw it all out the other night, having understood the gravel and such was a bad idea <Mmm, no... not necessarily. Is often useful for providing needed biological filter area...> .....we are going away for the weekend. Do you think he'll survive if we leave him, should we bring him, should we get a neighbor in to feed him??? Again, you rock. Thanks. Annie <I would NOT feed this fish over the weekend... NOR provide "vacation food" in its system... BobF> Goldfish Questions (Black moor), sys., fdg. 5/27/07 Hello Again! <<Hi, Megan. Tom here.>> After enjoying the company of my new black moors (had them for approximately four weeks), I have come up with several questions. <<Okay.>> 1. What is the reason for having the timed light source? What happens if it is on 24/7? (Other than wasting electricity!) <<Fish, like people, need 'down time', i.e. sleep/rest. Leaving the lights on 24/7, for example, doesn't replicate a 'normal' day/night evolution for them. They can become 'sleep deprived', in a way. Stressful, to say the least. Since most all homes/dwellings will receive at least some daylight, it would be better to leave the tank lights off all the time rather than the other way around. (Still not a good idea but I think you can see my point.) In addition, limiting the amount of light that the tank is exposed to helps to keep algae growth contained. Many folks who just can't seem to get this under control are successful once they learn to limit the period of time that the lights are on for the tank.>> 2. Of the two fish, one tends to stare into a plant for approximately 1/2 hour intervals. The other fish will sometimes brush against him, or nudge him (no more aggressive behavior since the introduction of silk plants!), and then he will act like a normal goldfish, but he seems to just "zone out" in the same spot with this plant. Is this something to be concerned about? The other fish seems extremely happy, and has not shown any behavior like this. Could it be an eye problem? (Eyes appear clear from a side view, with yellow/white irises.) He can easily locate food - in comparison to the unaffected fish - and swims with no difficulty. What could it be? <<He may be doing exactly what you suggest, 'zoning out'. Kind of a fish version of a cat nap. I wouldn't be concerned about this unless he starts hiding or locating himself at the top or bottom of the tank. He may just be tired and finds this 'restful'.>> 3. Finally - food! I have been feeding them a variety of spinach, peas, and the general flake goldfish food, and I have tried not to overfeed them, however, how much do you feed a goldfish with large eyes? According to the rule, feed a goldfish the amount equivalent to his eye - but the volume, or surface area? <<Here's where we could end up with 'fat' Black Moors or Bubble Eye Goldfish! This 'rule of thumb' references the volume of the eyeball, not the entire anatomical structure around it. Keep in mind that Goldfish, in the wild, are constantly looking for greenery, such as algae, to feed on so this admonition isn't so much directed at how much they'll consume (provided it's appropriate food) as how much they'll 'miss'. Goldfish will certainly 'scavenge' for morsels that got away but are, generally, pretty messy eaters. What gets missed when they're fed too much will only contribute to the overall 'messiness' of these animals. Keeping their diets well-regulated will go a long way toward controlling eliminated waste, uneaten food and the amount of ammonia excreted through their gills, which is how they get rid of it rather than through their waste.>> Again, thanks for the help! Megan <<You're more than welcome. Tom>> Confused with stringy white poop answers and questions, Goldfish sys./hlth., fdg. 5/12/07 Hi WWM crew, <Greetings.> I currently own 2 fantail goldfish, 1 being 4" long; YJ and the other 1 1/2" long; Brandy, both excluding the tail. I have had YJ for over a year now and she is doing wonderfully well (ie: extremely active and always begging for food =) She even puts up with me petting her whenever I feed her). She used to live in a small tank on her own and 2 months ago, when I decided to get her a bigger tank, I also decided to get her a friend (Brandy). <Goldfish are indeed sociable, and respond positively to having tankmates of their own kind as well as affection from their owners.> They both live in a 10 gallon tank (which I've now found out is not big enough, after reading your website). <Indeed. Realistically, you want something 30 gallons plus. Goldfish routinely reach around 25-30 cm in length, and at that size need more swimming space than 10 or 20 gallon tanks provide.> I use an under-gravel filter. <Which is fine, provided you maintain it properly, specifically give it a good stir with a rod of some sort each couple of weeks and then siphon out the gunk along with the water. Do a 50% water change weekly.> I currently don't do any checks on the nitrate/ ammonia etc levels as I wasn't told to when I first got the tank and still have no idea how to go about this. Will this seriously effect their quality of life? <Long term/short term? Short term you'll probably be fine. Lots of people manage to keep fish without test kits. But in the long term, being able to monitor things like pH and nitrite is very, VERY helpful when things go wrong. 90% of problems with fish come down to the wrong water chemistry or poor water quality. Even things caused by obvious pathogens (like whitespot/ick) are usually provoked by changes (declines) in water quality. If you're cheap like me, go buy the dip-stick test kits. Here in the UK they're around 10 pounds for 25 tests. But better yet, you can slice them down the middle with a scalpel or scissors and make twice as many tests! Each one has colour pads indicating multiple tests including water chemistry ones and water quality ones. While not as accurate as traditional test kits, their price/convenience factor is very high.> I do 1/4 tank water changes every 1 1/2 to 2 weeks. <Not enough. Do twice as much, weekly. While you might see this as more work, in the long term it massively reduces the hassle factor by helping keep the aquarium cleaner and the fish healthier than otherwise.> When I first got Brandy, I assumed it was a female as it was quite round and heavy in the belly although I am not very sure of this anymore. <Sexing goldfish is essentially impossible until they start spawning. Swelling in the belly by females and the appearances of "tubercles" on the head of the males are the clues.> This is because a couple of weeks ago, to my surprise and delight, YJ spawned! =) So now I'm assuming that Brandy is in fact a male, which YJ knew from the start although he was too young to do anything about it. <Not quite sure this is how it works. Are you sure the eggs aren't snail eggs? Very common mistake. Fish eggs are small things about 1 mm across and laid separately usually on leaves. Snail eggs are in lumps of jelly and form small masses around 5-10 mm long and often appear on the glass. Anyway, fish don't usually release eggs unless actively spawning with a male. With goldfish, which spawn first when between 2-4 year old, courtship is very vigorous and difficult to ignore. Much chasing and splashing!> My main question is, however, is if Brandy has internal parasites. Just today, I noticed that there was white stringy poop on the bottom of the tank (and I'm assuming it's from Brandy as the thickness of the poop is rather thin, compared to YJ's, whose poop is usually thicker). <Probably fine. Internal parasites are far less common than people think. The best sign of parasites is rapid emaciation, that is, however much the fish eats, it gets thinner. Differences in the texture of the faeces are more about dietary factors than parasites.> The thing is, I've searched your website for answers to this question and I'm starting to get a little confused as to what it could be as most of the responses say that it MAY be internal parasites, although not necessarily. I'm also starting to think that maybe Brandy isn't round and heavy in the belly but bloated due to the internal parasites? <Fancy goldfish are notoriously difficult to diagnose in this regard because they have such mutated shapes. The deformities bred into them make it difficult to tell "normal" from "abnormal" body shape. If a fish is loaded with internal (gut) parasites such as worms, the body cavity will be swollen but typically the fish will also lose swimming ability too. This may be deliberate on the part of the parasite, since it "wants" the fish to be eaten by a predator so the parasite can make its way into the next host in its life cycle. If your fish is swimming and feeding normally, then chances are it is fine.> Both of them seem fine and are eating well. I feed them JBL Goldperls and some thawed peas every time I do a water change. <Try varying the diet a little more. Goldfish are omnivores and respond positively to as mixed diet as possible. Lean towards plant material, and use meaty foods sparingly. I'd suggest a ratio of 4 parts plant food to one part animal (or flake) food. Floating plants are a convenient way to start here, using things like Elodea. Skip feeding them once or twice a week and the goldfish will nibble contentedly on this stuff. Because these foods are low protein but high fibre, they "fill up" the goldfish nicely, keeping its guts nice and clean. Goldfish are essentially similar to humans in dietary needs, more veggies, less meat being the key to good health. You can raid your salad bowl for goldfish food, too. Most anything green leafy is good for them. Have a read of this: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshmalnut.htm > I'm very concerned about them, although this may seem like a small matter to others as I've grown very attached to both of them and I don't want them to be sick, not even slightly. <An excellent attitude!> Your help and advice is very much appreciated. Sincerely, Phylicia <Cheers, Neale> Feeding Peas to Goldfish (& Other Fish Too!) 5/7/07 Dear sir/madam, <Pufferpunk/Jeni here today, I'm a madam.> I have read a lot about the benefits to feeding peas to goldfish to help their digestive system. <Absolutely> Do the peas have to be crushed once they have been skinned or can they be put into the tank whole? I have a image of a whole pea stuck inside a little fantail!!! <Depending on the size of the fish, either way is fine, as long as you defrost them 1st. Also, try algae wafers. ~PP> Thanks for your help, Chris Stone Goldfish feeding 3/29/07 Hi, How long do you keep the sushi Nori, lettuce or spinach on the veggie clip. <It's safe until it disintegrates really. Minimal protein, so not much effect on water quality in terms of ammonia/nitrites. But when it starts to look messy, pull it out, just to save it going in the filter and clogging it up. Your weekly water change is the time to siphon out any crud you missed that might be hiding in the gravel.> Do you need to change it daily? What if the fishes don't eat all of it in a given day. <Most fish won't eat their greens on the first day; they like it softened up a little. I find by the second day they're enjoying it, and by the third, it's time to throw the greens out and put some more in. Also try vegetarian ("livebearer") flake food; usually made with Spirulina algae, and makes a good green food for omnivorous fish generally.> thanks <Your welcome, Neale> Carole Gauthier Goldfish, trouble... env., nutr... both? 2/1/07 Hello. I'm a beginner fish caretaker. And I have a number of problems. My fantail, Charles, is not doing too well. I got him about 3 months ago and he seemed fine up until about a week ago, when I started to notice rips in his fins. <From?> A day went by and his condition got worse (lethargy, floats at the top on his side) <Env., nutr.?> I separated him from the other fish to treat him. I gave him some Melafix, bought him some new food, and feed him peas. Now, in his hospital tank, he is looking worse. He's bloated, floating on his side, lethargic. I really want to save him, but I don't know what else to do! My other problem is with one of my other fantails, Peanut. He acts normal, but he goes to the surface and it looks like he is gasping for air. After he started doing that, I got them an air pump, but he still does it! Before they got sick, they were in a 10 gallon with 2 other fantails and 3 small comets (I know this was too small, I have moved the others to a much bigger tank since then). <Good...> I would make a partial water change every week and feed them once a day. <With?> I had a 10-30 (?) gallon filter in it and an air pump. Please help. <Not enough information proffered... But you can/will find your answer by reading here: http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshsystems.htm and the linked files above... Could easily be water quality, lack of filtration, poor nutrition at root here. Bob Fenner> Peas Hello, I absolutely hate peas but I love my fish so I thought that I would do this pea thing for them. So after skinning a few peas I didn't really know what to do next. Do I have to cook the peas before I feed them and some of them are a little large, would it be sensible to cut these down a bit more. thanks. hayli fairy x <Likely a good idea to prep. a batch of peas: "blanch" (microwave in a bit of water), allow to cool, pinch the skin off just before feeding... BobF> Fancy goldfish gasps for air after feeding 1/11/07 Hi all, <Taran> Firstly, thank for offering a superb website!! Hopefully, you can help me solve my fancy goldfish problem. <I do hope so as well> I have a 49-gallon tank that contains five goldfish: a black moor, an Oranda, a Ryukin, a panda telescope and a fantail. They are all about 4½ inches long. The tank is filtered with an internal filter, that filters 600l per hour and an external filter that filters 1000l per hour. <Good to have the redundancy here. I would only clean one out per maintenance/water change period... to preserve biological filtration> There are also two air stones in each corner and many live plants. I change 30% of the water each week. Here is my problem. Every time I feed my fish they gasp/gulp for air, immediately after feeding. In between feedings they occasionally gulp the odd air bubble. However, at no other time during the day do they gasp for air as vigorously as they do after they have been fed. <I see...> My Oranda especially seems to suffer and gasps for air for up to an hour an a half after being fed. The Oranda sometimes turns upside down on its back after I feed it and remains in this position for a couple of hours. I feed them pre-soaked sinking pellets (soaked for 5-10 min.s) once a day and pea's or occasionally blood worms in the evening. I have tried 3 different of pellets (2 x sinking and 1 x floating and always soaked) vegetables, bloodworms, brine shrimp and raw shrimps. However, after each feeding all the fish are gulping or gasping at the surface. I have noticed that the fish seem to gasp for longer when fed high protein foods compared to the vegetables. <Ah, yes... harder for them to digest> Water tests show that I have no ammonia, nitrite and nitrate is at 25ppm. Can you help me to solve this problem? I will appreciate any advice you can give me. Many thanks Taran <It may be that the amount of food is at play here... either too much at one time, and/or that your fancy goldfishes are in too-bad shape to eat and swim about much... I would "cut back" on their portions, perhaps split the offered feedings into another time or two in frequency per day... and slim them down a bit... Better for their health in the long run. Bob Fenner, who often also is gasping for air after pizza and beer> Goldfish not eating - first thing to check is environmental conditions 1/7/07 Dear crew: Two of our gold fish do not seem to be able to open there mouths, they go to fetch the food but never open their mouths. They don't want to swim around, and are spending most of there time on the bottom of the tank. They are losing weight and their colour is fading it makes no difference what food we put in the tank. Regards, Stephen Walker <Stephen, first thing to check is environmental conditions. How large is this tank, how many goldfish are living in it, how long has it been set up, is it filtered, have you tested for ammonia, nitrite and nitrate recently? Everything you mention can be a symptom of poor water quality; I'd be willing to bet there's a buildup of toxins in the aquarium. I'd suggest doing a water change ASAP, and measuring the water parameters, if you haven't already. Here are some helpful links on properly caring for goldfish: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshsystems.htm http://www.kokosgoldfish.com/ Best regards, Jorie> Goldfish has dropsy... Pea-feeding 12/8/06 >
your article you said to feed the fish peas but how exactly do you do
that after the skin is off. <Mmm, I generally just "pinch them
out" and feed the blanched pea inside as is> I mashed it and it
floated to the bottom. <Mmm, I wouldn't mash...> I so not
think my fish can even get to the bottom. <May need to keep such a
debilitated fish purposely in a shallow water setting...> Please
explain. Also, I have added Epsom salt about a 1/5 tsp since
I have only a on gallon tank. <Too small> Tell me what else I can
do. <Read... and soon... show your concern by engaging, educating
yourself... then acting... http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshmalnut.htm and
the linked files above. Bob Fenner> Millie Goldfishes! Goldfishes! Goldfishes! Feeding 12/4/06 Okay, hi guys. <Hi Ashley, Pufferpunk here> Basically, I've had fish for a good portion of my life but they were always my mother's, so I just got to watch them and enjoy. <I started out my fishy career on the top of Mom's clean laundry basket, peering into Dad's 15g fish tank.> Now I have my own fish tank and beautiful, playful goldfish. I have a 55 gallon tank and 14 goldfish. We originally got the goldfish as "tank testers", as recommended by friends and family to do so, and then were going to get Oscars and Cichlids (who would eventually then eat the goldfish) so we weren't very concerned about them. Now we have formed an affection for them, even naming a few after family and friends (like one is named after the boyfriend's dad because he's orange and white but has an orange mustache). So, after all this blabbering... All I really need to know is how often can/should I feed them? Right now we're on a routine of 3 times a day, morning, when I get home from work and before bed, of small amounts. There never seems to be any food left, but I really don't want them to be over fed. <2-3x/day is fine, as long as they eat it all. I'd skip one day/week from feeding, to give them a good day to digest everything. That can be tank-cleaning day. Do a 90% water change & clean out the filters. They will get quite dirty with that many goldfish. I suggest overfiltration, for these heavy eaters & high ammonia/waste-producers. Eventually, those fish will grow a foot long & you'll need about 30g/fish. If you do well with them, they can live over 20 years!> And I also don't know what the actual breed of goldfish is, they're those $.24 ones that are meant to be feeders. <Those are called comet goldfish. GF are basically omnivores, which means they are plant-eaters, so give them some plants, like anacharis & hornwort to eat (may make a mess of them though), in addition to algae wafers & frozen peas (thawed & skinned). Good luck with them! ~PP> Thanks so much! Ashley Appropriate tank sizes 9/28/06 Hello! <Hi there> Your site is really amazing. I've had a fantail goldfish for about a year and just recently he's been showing signs on swim bladder (floating upside down, trouble moving, and slightly distended sides). I'm going to try and make a change to his diet. <Good> Your site really seems to recommend peas, but I'm not really sure how to prepare them. <Mmm, frozen/defrosted are best... but canned can work... de-skinned... by pinching> My main question today was if I should increase the size of this tank. He is currently in a 2.5 gallon tank, Mercutio (my fish) is about 2.5 inches long, but it isn't very wide. He seems to have been doing well in this size tank so far. What do you think? <Needs much more space... and will be much easier for you to keep clean as well> A Big thank you in advance, you guys really know what your talking about! Jen <Bob Fenner> Goldfish Not Eating
Normally 8/31/06 I'm sorry if this is a repeat, but
I really couldn't find my exact problem on your site (after an
hour). Last month we bought 4 (tiny) goldfish at the fish
store - 3 fantails and 1 which looks like a cross between a fantail and
an Oranda (it has an Oranda head but a fantail tail). This
last one started giving us concern about 10 days ago. He/she
hid under a rock for about 3 days, never coming out to
eat. Prior to that it was as happy as the rest of the
group. I tested the water, which was fine for pH, nitrates,
etc. We did a water change anyway. Over the next
week he's slowly coming out more and more, but still not eating,
and still avoiding the other 3 fish. He tries to eat, seems
interested in eating, but "misses" the food - he swims up,
tries to bite it, but never gets any. I haven't actually
seen him eat anything lately. His sides now look
"ridged" which I'm guessing are his bones showing
through. He has not seemed bloated throughout this, nor
otherwise diseased - no fungus, no rot. His swimming is
fine, but slow, and he can cover the entire tank. The fish
are in a 95 gallon tank. I've been feeding them flakes
(yes, I've now read your advice and will start in on vegetables
promptly). When he started acting odd I would occasionally
throw an algae wafer in just in case it helped. I feed them
twice a day. We also have a pleco in the tank, otherwise no
other fish (hence the algae wafers). Unfortunately we do not currently
own a quarantine tank. Your advice would be most appreciated
- this is the one fish my 3-year old daughter picked
out. Thank you. Jen. < Do a 50%
water change, vacuum the gravel and clean the filter. I don't see
any specific disease problem here so maybe a big water change will give
him a boost. Watch him closely to see if his vision seems OK. damaged
cloudy eyes can affect their ability to get food.-Chuck>
Green Peas 8/20/06 Hello Bob and... <<Tom? :)>> No question this time, just an observation that may help some of your readers. I notice by reading many FAQ'S and articles on WWM that most of you recommend frozen peas for certain fish. For those of you with arthritis, shelling the peas is a little difficult. I use the dried peas in a bag like to make split pea soup. Soak them in water for about 10 min. and they seem to work fine. Just thought some of your readers may benefit from this...Thanks...DR <<Thanks for the tip, DR. Will pass this along (as you know, by now) and I'm sure others will, indeed, benefit. Thanks, Tom>> A few goldfish tips that have worked for
me 8/13/06 Dear Crew, <<Hi, Shellie. Tom
with you.>> I have written to you before about my fantail, Sara.
Once again, I would like to thank you for reassuring us that he did not
have pop eye. I have continued to keep an eye on him and always will
but now I do not worry about him. I have only had goldfish for about a
year but I did successfully raise two Fantails, a Comet and a
Plecostomus without stunting them in a 10-gallon tank. This was not
done on purpose however, but bad pet store advice was the culprit. With
nearly daily water changes and meticulous attention they have all grown
and prospered long enough to survive a move to their current home which
is a 55-gallon long. It is by no means their permanent residence and I
do know they will outgrow that one as well in time. The point of this
e-mail is to share a feeding regime that I found works for me. I refuse
to admit how often they are fed on the grounds it can and will
incriminate me. However, I can tell you that variety is the most
important element I have discovered. When these fish were first
purchased, I found to my dismay that you are told to feed them a
variety but there didn't seem to be much of that in goldfish food.
You could find different sizes of food for different sizes of goldfish
but that was about it. However, there were many brands of goldfish food
and when I read the cans I discovered that every company makes it
differently and even may have different ingredients. Having a Pleco, I
also noticed that I could add sinking algae tablets and shrimp pellets
to my goldfish diet. I have to work hard to make sure the Pleco gets
his own food! Anyway, if you find this advice useful, please feel free
to pass it on. My babies get Wardley All Natural (no colors) Goldfish
Flakes, TetraFin Goldfish Flakes, ColorFin Sinking Granules, TetraFin
Goldfish Crisps as well as sharing Aquarian Shrimp Pellets and the
standard algae discs with the Plecostomus. At all times in the tank
they have either spinach, red leaf lettuce, green leaf lettuce,
zucchini, cucumber or romaine on a veggie clip. I do not feed them all
of these foods at the same time or even necessarily in the same day.
With this method though, they get a lot of variety and I have never had
a problem with swim bladder, ich, or other fish stress diseases. Even
in the 55-gallon I clean the tank and filter every three days with the
requisite water change/gravel vac. My point is that you don't have
to give up your goldfish if you have found out the hard way they have
an inappropriate home. With very conscientious care and a lot of hard
work, they will survive and even thrive for a time in a smaller home. I
would never recommend you put them in a small place on purpose and you
definitely should be seeking a bigger container as soon as possible,
but you can keep them healthy and happy long enough to get a bigger
tank. Thank you for listening. Shellie <<Uncharacteristically,
I've left your post completely intact because, frankly, there's
nothing I could add to or detract from. It's well-written, concise
and makes a number of very good points. Many can/will learn from this
and my thanks to you for sharing your experience. Continued success to
you, Shellie. Tom>> Goldfish and Brine Shrimp 8/2/06 Hi! <<Hi, back! Tom here.>> I think you'll be glad to hear that I have gotten a much larger tank and so far all is going well. <<I recollect this conversation and I'm very glad to hear the good news!>> I was just wondering if I could feed my goldfish frozen brine shrimp or bloodworms? <<The brine shrimp? Yes. There's roughage here that shouldn't pose a problem. I'd be reluctant about getting too "crazy" with the bloodworms, though.>> I feed these to my tropical fish, and was wondering if I could do the same with my 2 small goldfish. I just really want to feed them something different, and I think it would be great if I could feed them those things. (They eat flakes and peas at the moment). <<Oh, lots of different things that you can feed Goldfish that'll make them happy. You do want to steer clear of foods high in protein, however. Meaty foods, particularly. Goldfish have long digestive tracts designed to handle veggies like algae, zucchini, spinach, etc. Unfortunately, foods high in protein are for fish with short digestive tracts. Kind of a matter of digestive "speed", really. If fish, or any other animals, assimilate any food in their digestive tracts too quickly, it leads to blockage/compaction. Goldfish, despite their sometimes "silly" eating habits, are designed to feed primarily on algae. They need lots of vegetable matter in their diets.>> Thanks again for all the help. Great site!! <<Thank you very much and, do research our site for Goldfish diet. Sabrina contributed a fine article regarding this that I'm sure you'll find enlightening/informative. Tom>> Trying to feed a varied diet... for Goldfish 7/31/06 I've learned a lot from this website, thank you! I wonder if what I'm reading pertains to simple "feeder" goldfish as well as the fancy varieties. I have three goldfish in a 20 gallon tank; two are approx 2 inches and one is approx 4. <Mmm, getting to sizes that you may need to look for a larger tank> I fed the larger one almost exclusively earthworms from my compost bin and houseflies, and occas flake food. I realize now that this was too much protein. <Yes> I just upgraded the tank and added the two smaller fish. I bought floating pellets but they seemed to get lost in the bubbles from the aeration from the power filter and the fish didn't seem to notice them. <"Sticks, wafers" that are more discrete, sinking will work out better> The small fish weren't interested in the blanched lettuce clipped to the side of the glass and the large one was unable to get bites out of it and then lost interest. They did eat peas that were squished out of the casings. The nibbled at blanched cucumber but it didn't look like they actually got any of it. Am I trying to feed them food that is inappropriate for their size? <Yes, good that you realize> Do you have suggestions for other ways to vary their diets and interest them in different food? I don't think I want to mess with the hassle of trying to grow live plants in the tank. Thanks, I look forward to hearing from you. Tami <Do seek out prepared foods in the formats mentioned. For goldfish specifically. There are several brands that make/offer such. Bob Fenner> Re: Trying to feed a varied diet 7/31/06 Thank you so much for your prompt reply! I have a couple of questions to clarify your advice. When I asked if I am feeding food that is inappropriate, I'm confused by your reply "Yes, good". Are you saying, "yes the food is inappropriate, good for you for figuring it out" or "yes this is good food for your fish"? <Sorry for this confusion... I did amend the response before posting to the public... The middle meaning. Good that you figured this out> Thank you for your suggestion for looking for prepared foods, I will do that. But I am also interested in feeding fresh veggies. Do you have any other suggestions for how I can make them more appealing/obvious or easier for the little guys to eat? <Really a matter of blanching various types to see what is palatable... small pieces of zucchini type squashes are some faves> And what do you suggest for feeding critters ... should I buy freeze-dried, frozen or continue to forage for live earthworms? Thanks again! You guys are great! <Better (most convenient) to use commercially prepared frozen/defrosted small-ish worms, crustaceans... but not in excess... Bob Fenner> Red Cap Oranda - Red is fading 7/15/06 Hello, <<Hello, Dan. Tom with you today.>> I have had a Red Cap Oranda for one year and just recently the "redness" of the cap is fading. In fact, it's almost entirely gone now! Apart from that, the fish seems perfectly healthy - swims well, eats well, etc. I have another Red Cap Oranda in the tank and that one is fine...at least for now. Any thoughts? <<Coloration changes in Goldfish are not uncommon particularly during their first year. While I've not run across your specific situation there are several factors at play including genetics, diet, exposure to sunlight and age. Since your pet appears to be quite healthy otherwise, and your other Red Cap hasn't (yet) shown any signs of the same thing happening, I would suspect a genetic predisposition to the fading and/or loss of color. Something of a more "hands-on" nature might be to investigate supplementing your Orandas' diets with Spirulina algae. The carotenoid pigments in Spirulina have been reported to significantly enhance the coloration in Koi and Goldfish so, if you feel like doing a little "dabbling", it might be worth a shot.>> Thank you very much, Dan Feins Beverly, MA <<My pleasure, Dan. Tom>> Goldfish digestion 6/4/06 Hey Crew. <<Hey, Justin. Tom>> Forgive me if this question has already been answered; I searched the archives but couldn't find anything quite like it. <<Let's see if I can help, then...>> I have two fantail goldfish in a 33 gallon tank. I've had these fish for over a year; they are robust and in good health. I think. I've noticed something odd lately with the amount of feces they produce. I know goldfish are known to produce a lot of waste, but in the year I've had them I've never observed this. Long strings of feces, sometimes reaching a couple of inches. The poop is solid and dark in colour. <<I see no real reason for concern with this. Depends on the food they're eating. Short as opposed to long strings is more ideal but I don't see a problem.>> When I first saw this, I suspected they had been constipated, and things were finally starting to flow, so to speak. I held off on feeding for a few days, but by the fourth day, they were still producing a lot of waste. Since then, I've fed very sparingly (once every 3-4 days) but still see them producing a lot of waste, every day. At this point, you'll probably want to know about their diet. <<This would help, yes.>> I try to be very balanced (frozen bloodworms, frozen brine, dried daphnia, dried Tubifex, flake food and peas) but recently realized I was probably giving them too much protein. <<The brine shrimp and daphnia will have a "cleansing" effect as will the peas. Goldfish, as you now are aware, don't process proteins well. The flake food can be problematic if proteins constitute too much of its make-up. Best case? Proteins should account for 20%, or less, of the ingredients contained in the food.>> But I stopped this practice month or so ago, so I'm not sure if it may still be the culprit here. Since this phenomenon began, I've been feeding only Omega One goldfish flakes, and peas. <<Look into blanched vegetables as supplements to your pets' diets. Spinach, lettuce, cucumber, etc. provide the types of nutrition your Goldfish require. Please research Goldfish diet on WWM.>> Is it normal for goldfish to still have food in their systems, this long after a feeding? <<More likely that they're still not getting enough veggie matter into their systems.>> There is no other source of food in the tank for them to snack on, other than what I feed them. Aside from the waste production, the fish look and behave normally. Thanks in advance for any light you can shed on this. JM <<Happy to help, Justin. Good luck with your pets. Tom>> A question about Goldfish
feces - 05/10/2006 Good Evening, Crew. <<Hello,
Alfredo. Tom again.>> I have 2 goldfish, a small Ryukin and a
small lionhead, in a 50 litre tank. They are kept at 26 degrees and
have a hang-on filter, a powerhead, and an undergravel filter.
<<Still have the UGF? Pull it out, my friend. Old technology and
likely to lead to more problems.>> I feed them once a day and
never more than their eye volume (by the way, is it the volume of one
or two eyes?). <<One.>> Their diet consists of brine
shrimp, thawed skinless peas, and sinking pellets.
<<Consider adding some flake food here. High in vitamins and
other "good stuff".>> Today's water test
readings are as follow : Ammonia : 0 Nitrite: 0 pH: 7. Nitrate: 5
<<All good.>> I noticed today that the Ryukin was producing
a long, transparent feces that floated to the top as if filled with
air. Is this normal? <<No, it's not. Should be short and
dark.>> If not, please tell me how to fix the problem. <<A
change in diet may do the trick. If not, Metronidazole for internal
infection may be in order here.>> I love my goldfish very, very
much. Thank You, Alfredo Echeverria Ripstein <<De nada.
Tom>> Lola, the Pampered Picky Eater - 04/19/2006 Hi Sabrina <Steve! Good to hear from you! I hope your Abelmoschus crop is doing well - I'm still interested in trying to grow this plant some time.> This is about Lola, the large fantail. <I do very clearly recall.> She was very stable for several months on a diet of mashed, cooked, peeled peas, cooked zucchini, and minced, boiled greens. When I feed her the greens, she has large, dark green, well formed stools, which she doesn't have with the peas. <Sounds like good goldfish poo.> Other vegetables like mashed, cooked beans and carrots seem to constipate her--as evidenced by a period of immobility and large, well formed stools. <Immobility is definitely a symptom to avoid....> I was--and am--concerned about a varied diet so I thought I would give both goldfish (Golda and Lola) some defrosted, frozen brine shrimp enriched with Spirulina for protein. I was hoping... They both loved it. <Adult frozen or live brine shrimp is another very good food to use to help correct constipation, actually, as it is very high in "roughage" content.> Golda was fine, but 3 days after the seafood, Lola stayed on the bottom, dorsal fin clamped, barely moved and barely ate! <Yee-IKES! Any possibility that this was coincidence and related to some other variable? Water parameters ideal, I trust (ammonia, nitrite ZERO, nitrate less than 20ppm)?> She didn't interact with Golda at all--even though Golda was constantly nudging her, trying to get her to move. This was the worst she had been ever. <Disturbing.> The next day, a long, irregular white thread started to emerge from her anal spot. I had read that this was not a good sign. <Indeed.... Can be a symptom of a number of internal complaints (including constipation), but usually associated with parasites. I would probably wager that it was from constipation (again).> After fasting for a day, I returned to her usual diet of peas. It has been 3 days of slow recovery--and a few long, thin green stools-- but she is definitely improving and eating more! <Ahhhh, good.> Today she raised her dorsal fin when I fed her and she actually started to resume her old feeding behavior of chasing Golda away from the peas so she can (try to) eat them all. (Golda is no dope--she sneaks in when Lola isn't looking and gulps down a lot.) <Heh! I'm glad she's improved.... Whew!> She is still "resting" with clamped dorsal fin but not nearly as much. Now when I enter the room, she gets up and swims around. It appears that mashed, peeled peas are the only food she can tolerate without digestive distress. <What about the other greens that gave her well-formed stools but no distress?> I read that a constant diet of peas can cause cataracts. <To be honest, I wouldn't know - however, a diet of only one thing can in fact be harmful, just for not giving "well-rounded" nutrition.> I am completely at a loss. Just about everything besides peas causes some distress as evidenced by immobility and then large stools. (When she gets just peas, I never see stools.) Yikes! Could she be that fragile? <Yes, she really could. "Fancy" goldfish are notorious for having digestive issues, and once in a while they can be as bad as Lola. "Fancy" goldfish are bred to be (literally) deformed - deformed, shortened bodies leads to deformed "innards", too. In Lola's case, deformed to the point of being dangerously unhealthy. For this and other reasons, I am not a fan of selectively bred fish; I'm still not even sure where I stand on things like fancy guppies and long, fancy finned Bettas.... But I won't get on my soapbox now, I promise.> What do I give her for better nutrition? <Hey, I don't know if I'd written this before our last correspondences: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshmalnut.htm . In Lola's case, I would try with some aquarium plants like Anacharis/Elodea/Egeria.... Maybe also some floating water lettuce or watersprite, as these plants have tasty dangling roots that would be of good nutritional value. If it were me, I would also experiment by keeping a small tub outside with water lettuce or watersprite in it and "change out" the one(s) I keep in the tank every few days - this way, not only would the plants have a chance to grow their roots back, but you'd be brining in some nice tiny little organisms living on the roots that would also be consumed by the goldfish, adding more nutritional worth. I canNOT speculate how this would cause Lola's sensitive tummy to react, but if it were me/my fish, I would try it. You know her better than I do, though, and know better what you can/should risk.... A tough call with the experiences she's had thus far.> How much protein does she need? <Mm, not a great deal.> Has anyone tried baby food with goldfish? <I don't know.... Honestly, I fear this would foul the water significantly and very quickly, so I wouldn't recommend it.> Do I need to boil the greens even more than 5 minutes? <Nah, even 5 minutes is longer than I do; they just need to be soft enough for her to munch.> As usual I am so grateful for your help with Lola. <And I am glad to be of service to her and you. Thank you for your diligent care of your animals!> Steve <All the best to you, -Sabrina> Tank creep, FW systems, platies, growing Elodea 4/6/06 Hello Crew, I have a couple of questions. I just in the planning stages yet, but I have this image in my head of a warm freshwater tank with lots of live waving grass and many fish flitting about (instead of a single Betta in a tiny 2.5 gallon tank). So with that in mind; would it be O.K. to have 4 blue Dalmatian Platys /(Xiphophorus maculatus)/ & a Betta /(B. splendens) /in a 10 gallon tank? <Yes> Or should I be thinking 15gal? Can I have more than 4 Platy's in the 10gal? <Bigger is better... but a ten will do... until/unless the platies reproduce...> I have fairly hard water (with Ph at 7.6), and figured that the platys would be the best choice. I don't want to spend a lot of money on lights (and conversely the electric bill) <You are wise here> so I'm thinking that Java Fern & a Sword Plant would work with low/natural lighting, hard water & the proper substrate/plant food. Do you have any other thoughts on plants? <Lots. Posted on WWM> The second question relates to Goldfish (your basic comets) and Anacharis. My two very special and beautiful Goldfish think it's the yummiest stuff ever & mow it down. Is it possible to just have a special plant tank (or bucket) with just Elodea/Anacharis (a farm tank, no fish)? <Yes> I'm feeling a bit cheep about lights and filtration (especially since this plant will just end up in a goldfish tummy), but I don't want to be that cheap so it doesn't grow. Thanks, Ann. <You've got a bunch of good ideas Ann. Bob Fenner> Re: Various Goldfish Questions ... fdg. - 03/17/06 Thank you Bob for your reply and for that link. <Welcome> I actually decided yesterday to scrap the flakes entirely since they caused my poor Pearlscale so much trouble... so I made a batch of gel food instead! It has peas, beans, carrot, egg, rice, salmon, paprika, and a little bit of the flake food just for the nutritional content. <Sounds very good> I had been supplementing the flakes with Cos lettuce and peas, and the occasional shrimp when we had them - but I think this and the gel food will be much much better! <Yes> I moved the Pearlscale back to the main tank because he looked so miserable, and he perked up straight away. He is no longer head standing but has more trouble maneuvering than he used to. I'm going to add Epsom salt to the main tank and continue with the peas and gel food. It is alright to replace the rock salt I usually put in the aquarium with Epsom salt indefinitely as a replacement, or is this just a short term treatment? <Best not to keep salt on these fish continuously> Thank you for all your help, Emma <Again, very welcome. Bob Fenner> What in Cornation? Goldfish food 3/17/06 Dear Bob <Deirdre> Sorry for bothering you again but I think that I'm after doing something really stupid - I was trying to vary their diet a bit and gave them 4 kernels of sweet corn tonight to see how they'd like it - however I never took the skins off - will they be able to pass it? <I think so, no problem> I feed them peas all the time but always shelled - I just can't believe how idiotic I was not to see the possible dangers in what I was doing... I searched all around to find specific information on this before getting back in touch with you - I am very fond of these little guys.. Thanks a million for your time and patience Deirdre <This too shall pass! Bob Fenner> Goldfish and Possible Mal-Nutrition, Environmental Disease -
03/08/2005 My 4 year old fantail goldfish " Maggie" seems
to be feeling poorly. Yesterday and today, she's had a
serious loss of interest in food. She has no visible
"critters" on or under her scales. Her focus are
normal for her. She seem to be having trouble staying
"afloat". She just sinks to the bottom of the
tank. <A likely sign of mal-nutrition. Please
read here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshmalnut.htm
.> She has no interest in play time, which we do every day, and she
just loves. I'm at a loss. I can't seem to find any
material with these symptoms. Also, her tail seems to be
drooping from the attachment point of her body. Any
suggestions you can give would be greatly appreciated.
<First and foremost, test your water. Ammonia and nitrite
must be ZERO, nitrate ideally less than 20ppm. It is
possible that your fish may be suffering from environmental
disease. Please read the following link for
more: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshdisease.htm
.> Thank you, -Donna <All the best to
you, -Sabrina> Koi starving syndrome - 2/28/2006 Hi, I am so upset as to be very distraught because I think I have inadvertently "starved" one of my best koi fish! I purchased a lot of feeder baby koi to "save" them and tried to keep them thinned out enough in my tank so as to give them a good chance for survival and growth. Well, in so doing, it appears that one of the original koi I had bought individually in the store has been starving and I didn't know it until it's too late, or is it? <Never too late if the animal is alive> Isn't there ANYTHING I can do to make his stomach expand again? He absolutely won't eat the fish food. I've put the NovAqua water conditioner in which has vitamins and Echinacea, etc., but it is useless. Isn't there a thing I can do? Thanks, Leslie Wilson <Small amounts of food offered frequently (a few times per day), moving the fish (if not already) into a smaller aquarium... using some cooked rice present almost continuously, along with blanched/microwaved terrestrial greens... Bob Fenner> Goldfish feeding question 2/24/06 We have one small goldfish in a large bowl. We will be away for a couple of days and wonder if it will be ok with no food for 2 full days or do we need a pet-sitter? <No... I would not risk this... too much chance of over-feeding. Bob Fenner> Please advise! Many thanks, Bonnie Goldfish With Eating Problem 2/14/06 Hey, my comet has had this problem for almost a week now, he just can't seem to eat his food properly. I feed him very sparingly once a day and he seems keen to eat - he collects it from the surface, seems to have a job swallowing then spits it all back up again...and more (food from a previous day or more I guess). I have always fed him very little so am very confused and worried to what's wrong. Is it possible he's swallowed an aquarium stone? Or could something else be wrong with him? I've had him for four months now and he's never had this problem before. Please help! Shanna < Check the mouth area for an obstruction. Catch him in a net. While in the net point the head up and look in the mouth with a flashlight. Remove any obstructions with tweezers.-Chuck> Goldfish (malnutrition 2/9/06 They are fed "TetraFin" goldfish food. What do you suggest I do differently? <... Please read here: http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshmalnut.htm and the linked files above... Bob Fenner> Goldfish being eaten by CAE, crowded in a system that's likely uncycled and mis-fed dry food only. Now, what's the problem? - 2/4/2006 Hi, Great site that you have. I have 3 fish in a 10-gallon tank. 2 goldfish and 1 algae eater. I don't exactly know that how big they are, sorry. There names are, Charmander, Tiger, and Stripeback. <Keep your eye on that algae eater...> I have just noticed today that Tiger( biggest and oldest in the tank) is acting funny. He rarely goes up to the surface when food comes( I feed them flake food) <Not good alone> and has a long, brownish/reddish big streak on his tail. And he is swimming very slowly. I don't know what to do. I changed the tank completely <Also a bad idea> just recently and he seemed to be doing fine. Also, we just got the algae fish a couple of weeks ago. Does that have something to do with it? <Not likely> And today, I saw the algae eater on Tiger's tail, sucking on it, like trying to clean it. <Not! Is damaging your goldfish. Should be removed immediately> Any help would be appreciated. Thank you for reading. <See the subject title above? Read on WWM re Goldfish Feeding, Systems, Algae Eaters... Bob Fenner> Goldfish Poop 1/22/06 Bob, we have 16 Comets in a 4' indoor tank. All had been going well for the first few months. We fed them the food recommended by the pet shop when we bought them. It is called TetraFin goldfish crisps. When this food ran out we just bought another type. Since then the fish have had long feces trailing behind them. I have since finished the second lot of food and have gone back to the original product thinking this would solve the problem. But it hasn't. I was thinking that we were overfeeding them, so have been very vigilant with how much we give them for the last few days, but this has not solved the problem. Any ideas please. It is not a good look when the tank and the fish look so spectacular but the fish have long feces trailing behind them. Please help. Gavin & Ann-Louise Nolan <Hello, Gage here tonight, as long as the fish doo is green or brown in coloration your fish are in good shape. The best thing that you can do is provide them with a proper diet and see if it makes any difference, for more information on a good Goldfish diet please see the following article. Best regards, Gage http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshmalnut.htm > Goldfish Not Eating 1/7/06 Hi there, I have 2 goldfish (sex unknown) I have had them since November 05. They have been fine until yesterday. We fed them as usual and noticed this morning that they had not touched their food (which is unusual as they have normally eaten it in the night) and still haven't touched it today. I did change the food half way through today just incase I had affected the food as I was cleaning before hand. I have been feeding them with some pellets that the pet shop sold with the fish. I would be grateful for any help. Thank you, Dawn < Change 50% of the water, vacuum the gravel and clean the filter. Wait a couple of days before feeding. If they don't eat then treat with Metronidazole for internal bacterial infections. When they start to eat give them a food high in fiber and vegetable matter. Feed them once a day and only enough food so that all of it is gone in a couple of minutes.-Chuck> Goldfish bottom feeders - 01/03/2006 Hi
to the Crew <Hello to you> Congratulations on a wonderful
site. I have really enjoyed reading and picked up many more
new tips. I have been keeping fish for quite a few years and always
find this a fascinating hobby where I am constantly learning new
things. <I as well> I have recently returned to keeping goldfish
after having Frontosa for about six years. It is a long story about why
I have had to change my whole set up which I wont bore you with
here. <Am going to Goldfish from Africans soon
myself> My tank is only small 2 foot long by 18 inches wide by 18
inches tall. The tank is planted with elodea and sword fern
and Java moss with a nice piece of driftwood, I have just started using
a C02 unit very successfully for the first time. I have an
Eheim canister filter and a sunlight. Needless to say my
Goldfish are very happy, there are just two of them, they are about an
inch long and are calico. I know I will eventually have to
get them a bigger tank but for now things are going fine. So
what is my question? Well the Goldfish I have kept in the
past have always been very active bottom feeders turning the gravel
over with gusto. This included fancy varieties doing
this. However my two Fantails just don't feed off the
bottom. I feed them twice a day and have a variety of different foods I
feed to ensure that they get all the nutrients they require, and of
course they munch on the elodea. I now have a nice patch of algae
growing on the gravel it is so untouched. Is this something
peculiar to them or is it common for goldfish not to turn over the
gravel? <Mmm, nope. Some fancy goldfish (as individuals more as
sports) don't feed much here> Your thoughts on this would be
much appreciated as I am quite puzzled by it, especially as the
Goldfish seem so healthy. Many thanks Elizabeth <I'd look into a
couple of large mono-sex snails... Please see here re: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwsnails.htm
Bob Fenner> Feeding Goldfish - 01/03/2006 My black moor and angelfish died. I bought 2 more fancy goldfish and now I have 4. They are happy and very cool. I feed them healthy stuff and everything is going great now. Can you just tell me if feeding them lettuce and peas is good (that's what I do) please answer. < Vegetable matter is very good for goldfish but may not have enough protein in them for long term health. I would still recommend a high quality goldfish food like Spectrum or equivalent. Feed once a day and only enough food so that all of it is gone after two minutes once each day.-Chuck> Goldfish... with goiter? 12/15/05 Hello, <Evening> I have a fantail, all of sudden last week it looked like he was choking and he was just sitting at the bottom of the tank. Anyway i <"I", sigh...> didn't like the way he was and took him to the vets, the vet gave him a antibiotic injection. After i got him home i noticed that his gill area is swollen ( i know fish don't have chins but it looks like his chin is swollen). <A good clue> He still swims about as normal but he swims with his head up. sometimes jumping out as well as though he's catching something. After swimming about a bit he still sits at the bottom of the tank. I don't know what to do. ave checked the water and that's fine. is there anything i could give him? Please reply. Thank you Charlotte <Your fish may have an iodine deficiency... I would administer Lugol's solution... a stock solution at a drop per five gallons every three days for three doses, and place a drop on the fish's food for the same regimen. Additionally, a level teaspoon of Epsom Salt per five gallons of system water should be placed. Bob Fenner> Whatever Lola Wants, Lola Gets.... 10/10/2005
Hi <Hello.> I wrote a while ago about my large (body is
3.5") fantail, Lola, who was just staring off into space all the
time. <Sabrina with you, today - please for future reference include
previous correspondences when possible, as there are a number of us
answering questions, and plenty of questions being answered; without
the name of the crewmember or the previous correspondence, we have no
idea where to route replies or continued correspondences.>
Everything checked out OK with water quality and Lola's health. I
started feeding peas and she gradually became more active -- and
obsessed with eating. <Sounds like a goldfish!> You guys
suggested I get her a dither fish. Today I put a medium (body 2")
fantail goldfish in with Lola. Lola immediately started chasing the new
fish. So I fed them both peas --at the same time. Lola chased the new
fish aggressively until it barfed up the food it had just eaten.
<Mm, it probably didn't actually regurgitate, just spat it
out.> Lola immediately ate the barf. <My guess is the new
fish did not know quite what to do with the peas yet, and Lola just
relished this uncertainty. Give it some time.> Now Lola is only
mildly annoyed with the new fish. The aggressive chasing has stopped;
more like a moderate teasing now. The new fish is not happy.
<Give it some time.> The dorsal fin is not clamped however. Is
this aggression about not feeding them enough? <Possibly, but
could just be even friendly. Or stranger yet, the newcomer may be
female, and Lola may be a mature male. Again, give it some time.> I
give the larger Lola 3 peas a day. Is it about territory?
<Unlikely.... goldfish don't tend to be territorial.> They
are in a 20 gallon tank with filter. Is the tank too small? <Will be
in the long run.> Is this just "getting to know you"
behavior? <Likely.> Is Lola afraid she will not get enough food
with a new friend in the tank? <Perhaps.> Would a munchie plant
help the situation? If so what kind? <An excellent idea. I would
recommend Egeria/elodea/anacharis.... A few species of plants fall
under these names; all grow similarly and goldfish love to eat
'em.> Should I separate them permanently if it continues?
<Again, give it some time.> Should I also feed them frozen brine
shrimp? <If you like.> Besides green veggies and rice, what else
would round out their diet well? I read so much about their digestive
problems and have eliminated the dry food (even soaked dry food).
<Sounds like you're doing great so far. Some frozen brine would
be okay to add to this, or frozen bloodworms once in a while.> Do
they need protein from other than plant sources? Can they eat
Abelmoschus manihot leaves? (It's a human food crop in the tropics
and loaded with protein.) <I have absolutely no idea whatsoever. I
thank you for mentioning this plant, though; I just had an opportunity
to learn about Abelmoschus - apparently okra is in this genus! How
neat! But, again, I have no idea whatsoever if A. manihot leaves can be
eaten by fish.> Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Tell me
what to do and I will do it! <Lola is indeed a lucky fish to
have you as a pal.> Lola is a family pet and I hate to see her being
so mean to her new friend--such as it is. <Give it some time;
hopefully this will sort itself out in a week or two.> As usual I
thank you for your valuable advice and for your incredible web site!
<And thank you very much for these kind words, Steve! I do hope all
goes well with this.> Steve Erickson <Wishing you, Lola, and the
newcomer well, -Sabrina> Great Start On Goldfish - 10/09/2005 Hello! <Good morning!
Sabrina with you today, on holiday in Hawai'i> Wonderful site,
I've been searching and reading for a while now. <Ahh, good.
That's the best start you can give your fish.> I have a 29g tank
set up for a young calico lionhead (who I do not have yet, he is on
hold). <Beeeee-autiful! I'm assuming you plan to set up and
cycle this tank first, eh? SO glad to read this. You're off to a
great start.> I was originally going to fall into the
"goldfish/ Pleco " trap, but knew I should wait until I had
done more research. <I'm smiling bigger with every sentence!>
I plan on just the one lionhead, and then upping to a 55g when he is
bigger. (Unless you suggest making the switch now.) <Ahh,
wonderful!! Unless he's already *massive*, the 29 will be a fine
home for a long while. Do consider getting him a couple pals when
he's into the 55 (or sooner, if they're all quite small), as
goldfish seem more comfortable with conspecifics around.> Since the
Pleco route can be dangerous, <Mm, I wouldn't say so much
'dangerous' as 'undesirable'.... Common plecs grow to
be massive.... 18" or so.... and prefer somewhat warmer temps than
are ideal for goldfish. If you want tankmates of a different species,
look to the weather/dojo loach.> I'd still be interested in
another bottom algae eater "fish". <Mm.... Some of the
smaller plecs might be of consideration, here; but you'll still
have the temperature preference issue.... I know clown plecs can hail
from surprising cold waters, but they're more of a wood and meat
eater, if I recall correctly (no guarantee of that!).> In addition
to the best filtration I can find, I also plan to vacuum and water
change once a week, so I thought a snail might be a good choice.
<Sure, if you like snails.> I've done some reading on the
apple snails, but can't seem to find a lot of info on snails AND
goldfish in the same tank. Will one snail/one goldfish get along?
<I'm sure.> What extra food/attention will I need to give the
snail? <Plant matter.... Likely same fare as what you will be
offering the goldfish.... Blanched human consumption greens (spinach,
cucumber, zucchini....), live aquatic plants like
Egeria/elodea/anacharis....> In a 29 or 55, is more than one snail
necessary? <Mm, 'necessary'? Depends upon what you wish the
snails to do.... Be pets? Eat algae? Eat plants?> How big will the
snails get? <They do call them 'apple' snails for a
reason.... Make a fist. Imagine it's a snail. There ya go!> Will
our heroes make it through the treacherous mines?? (It's Friday.
I'm giddy) <Heh!! It's Sunday morning (wow, sorry for the
delay in response time!) and I'm almost giddy, too. Quite an ocean
view here for answering fish questions!!> Thanks so much for the
help. :) <You bet.> P.S. If you know of any definitive
resources on the differences (if any) between ranchu and lionheads
I'd be interested. It's a neat subject matter! <In all
honesty, I do not. If you do come across any, send some links my way;
I'd like to take a look. Also, I'd like to touch a bit on the
algae janitorial work you expect of the snail(s).... There are other
methods of algae control; perhaps the best/most efficient is by
outcompeting the algae for nutrients with other (vascular) plants.
Plants like Anubias sp., java fern (Microsorium pteropus) and java moss
(Vesicularia dubyana) will hold up to most plant eaters, goldfish and
snails included. Do please take a look through our Aquatic Plants
articles, about fighting algae and such.... You may find that you
don't need an algae consumer, and can stock more around what you
like than what you think your system might (or might not) need. I'm
not at all trying to discourage you from an applesnail, mind you!
They're pretty cool animals. Wishing you well,
-Sabrina> Dropsical Goldfish - 10/06/2005 Hey Crew. Thanks so much for all the help you've given myself and others. <And thank you very much for these kind words - means a lot to us, really.> Once again I've come to seek your advice. Nova, my 1" Pearlscale goldfish, has come down with dropsy. Water parameters in his main tank have always been good (ammonia 0, nitrite 0, nitrates consistently in the 15-20 range), so I'm not sure what the cause of this was. <Possibly/likely dietary.... What do you feed him? Prepared dry foods like pellets and flakes are often a cause for concern in fancy goldfish.... A diet of aquatic plants and blanched human-consumption greens (peas, cucumber, spinach, zucchini....), supplemented with occasional dry or frozen fish foods often "cures" this condition and prevents its return.> As I write this he's been in a 3 gallon hospital tank for two days. I've medicated with Maracyn Plus, added 1 tbsp of Epsom salt, and raised the temperature to 27c. He's still gamely swimming around, and even still has his appetite, and this has inspired me to leave no stone unturned in trying to save this little guy. So far he's not getting any better or any worse. I know dropsy is almost always fatal, but is there anything else you can suggest that might help this fish? <"Dropsy" us just a term applied to a set of symptoms, just like "sneezing" can be related to an allergy, the flu, or an irritant in the air, there are many causes for dropsical symptoms. I suspect what your fish is experiencing is dietary. If, however, it is from a bacterial infection, foods medicated with Oxytetracycline would be my treatment of choice. For now, I would get some frozen peas (thaw, and squeeze the inside out of the shell, discard the shell) and feed him a couple. Discontinue all other foods for now, apart from possibly aquatic plants like anacharis/elodea/Egeria. Hopefully a good diet will help this fish recover.> JM <Wishing you well, -Sabrina> Re: Peas?! & Goldfish 9/29/05 Hi, <Hi again - I am so sorry that I didn't see this e-mail until so much after you sent it...it somehow got lost in the shuffle!> I emailed couple of wks ago (amateur with fish here) and Jorie (lovely) gave me loads of useful information. <I'm glad I could help.> I just wanted to quickly ask about...peas. I bought some frozen peas and put them in the tank - the fish pecked at them so to speak but didn't eat them, following day I decided I would squash them so they would be smaller and maybe they would eat them (thought they don't have teeth to break the pea so I would help out?!) They seemed to suck the bits of pea in their mouths then spit it back out!! How rude - they were birds eye as well not some cheap rubbish brand! Should I try sweet corn, my fish obviously don't like peas (neither do I though) and I had to pick the peas outta the tank as they weren't having any of it! Any advice?? <Although I don't have goldfish, I've tried feeding small bits of peas to constipated Bettas - some will take the peas, others won't. I think it's just a matter of taste. One thing you can try is soaking the pea (I wouldn't "squash" it, but maybe cut it into 3-4 smaller pieces, if the whole pea is too large) in garlic extract, something like Kent's Garlic Xtreme (or I'm told that pure garlic oil that comes in capsules in the grocery store spice aisle will work also)...couple of drops in a cup of water to thaw the peas in, and this may enhance the taste enough for the fish to show some interest. You certainly can try corn, but I don't know how well that would go over either. Basically, you are trying to get some "roughage" in the fish's diet...if you can't get the fish to accept peas, corn, other veggies, you could try an herbivore flake or pellet food as a supplement to the fish's normal diet.> Thanks in advance - Cheryl. <Again, so sorry this response is so late, but I certainly hope this helps you! Best, Jorie> White Goldfish Care 9/29/05 Hi, I have been trawling through your pages for goldfish. Lots of helpful advise on diseases, tanks, water etc. I have got the bug for fishes - few months back I got new house and decided I wanted some fishes so got 3, then someone said you should never have 3 in a tank (1 gets lonely and they fight or something) I was horrified so as the fish shop say my tank can hold 4. I decided to get another. I have 2 orange/gold ones, a red capped with white body one and the new one - an albino - am sure! Its so tiny and white with big black eyes - is there anything I should do different with this one? Strange question I know but I don't want it dying (or any of the others). Oh also, feed them some peas (Birdseye ones not cheap rubbish) and some sweet corn and weren't having any of it. Well they picked at them but didn't seem able to eat them? It was like me trying to digest a football - they are so tiny the peas seemed so big? Thanks v much & keep up great work, Cheryl < You have a white goldfish not an albino. Care for this fish as you have for the others. You can take the frozen peas and run then through a blender to make a paste that will easier for your goldfish to eat.-Chuck> Goldfish question, health... really nutrition 9/23/05 I've been reading a lot about constipation in goldfish and actually had to deal with it last week. That fish had a trail of brown feces trailing from it. I tried the pea remedy and she was fine the next day. Now, however, I have one with white stuff trailing from it . What is that? <Fecal material> He's acting OK right now. I have been feeding flakes, which they love , but recently got some Spring and Autumn pellets that have lots of veggies and will probably be better for them. <Please read on WWM re Goldfish, Pondfish Feeding> The pkg said they soften quickly and even small fish can eat them. These guys are still small, only a few wks out of the petstore, and they tried so hard to eat the things. I don't know if they sank or what, but went back to the flakes. These fish are in a small garden pond with filter and fountain. Anyway, my real question is about this white stuff. Thanks for your help. Chris <Look into blending in some fresh foods... not dried alone. Bob Fenner> Goldfish And Food Aggression? - 09/20/2005 Hi! <Ahoy thar, matey!> I was wondering what to do about one of my black moors: he fights with the other one in my tank over food and actually pushes the other one away with his nose (there are only 2 fish in the tank). As a result, the other fish gets less food. Should I feed more? Separate? Please advise. <I would recommend that you try offering live plants like Egeria/anacharis/elodea that can just be left in for them to munch; also, blanched human-consumption veggies like zucchini and cucumber also are a good plan. See here for more: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshfdgfaqs.htm . Wishing you well, -Sabrina> Goldfish Nutritional/Environmental Disease - 09/02/2005 Dear WWM, My fantail goldfish is acting abnormal. First off her belly seems a little swollen and she is most of the time hiding in a corner. <First indications of nutritional or environmental disease.... Be testing for ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate; maintain ammonia and nitrite at ZERO, nitrate less than 20ppm....> The only time she seems active is when I tap on the glass to get her attention <I would urge against this.... can actually be harmful. Water carries sound much easier than air; what is a gentle tap to you might be like a whack with a baseball bat to the fish.> or when I feed them. <As for feeding.... and the bloating.... Please consider feeding a lot of veggie matter (thawed frozen peas, with the shell squeezed off, blanched cucumber or zucchini, etc....) and offer plants like anacharis/elodea/Egeria for them to graze. A constant diet of pellet or flake food with too much protein content can cause gut blockages (bloating, constipation) in goldfish.> If you could help to see what's wrong with her that would be great. Also, another one of my goldfish seems to be having trouble swimming. Well, not really swimming but sometimes she seems to be falling to her right side and having trouble getting straight. <Also likely environmental and/or nutritional.> If you could help me with that too it would be great. <Please read here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshsystems.htm .> Thank You! <Wishing you well, -Sabrina> I've noticed that my goldfish is eating it's own tail. 8/22/05 <Whaaat? I do not think this is possible, my friend, unless the goldfish is a well-trained contortionist...> It's not that I'm not feeding it myself, there is goldfish food at the bottom. I clean out my bowl about once a week, so I would say there is about two days of food at the bottom. I will soon clean it out again because of the food at the bottom. <You should not be feeding the fish more than it can consume in 3-5 minutes. This leftover food is decomposing in the bowl and likely polluting the water...I'd guess there's a fair amount of undesirable ammonia, nitrite and/or nitrate in the bowl at the moment. Don't ever let unconsumed food add up like that. Cut down on feedings and if, for some reason, you do notice extra food on the bottom, suck it out with a turkey baster or the likes. How big is this bowl? How much water do you regularly change? Please consider stepping up the water changes and feeding less, much less from the sounds of it.> but why is he eating it's own tail. this morning it had the top half of the tail left and as of this evening he only has a nub of a tail and a few scales missing. He's the only one in the tank. There is a snail for algae and an air filter. <I'd guess this is some sort of fin/tail rot, something which is caused by poor environmental conditions. Follow the above instructions re: additional water changes and drastically reduced feeding (remember: if the fish doesn't eat it in 3-5 min., you've fed too much!) and I'd guess the problems will rectify themselves. In the long term, consider upgrading the bowl to a tank with filtration...goldfish are notoriously messy (but beautiful) fish that require a good deal of space and lots of filtration.> Need a helpful answer quick, Rae <Good luck! Do read on www.wetwebmedia.com the articles about filtration, cycling and feeding in the freshwater area. Jorie> Goldfish Goodies - 08/04/2005 Howdy! <Hello, again!> I have 2 Oranda goldfish who LOVE bananas, oranges, grapes, and peas. How often should I feed these "treats"? <The fruits I would keep as a very seldom treat - but greens like peas, zucchini, spinach, and the like are *excellent* regular food sources. Far superior to flake foods. Keeping plants like anacharis/elodea/Egeria available for munching is also a good plan.> Currently I feed them a small pinch of flakes in the morning, give them a 5 minute snacking period (they munch on whatever fresh food I've put in their veggie clip) in the afternoon, and another pinch of flakes in the evening. <Sounds adequate, depending of course on what a "pinch" is to you - my pinch may be quite a bit smaller than yours ;) But all in all, sounds great. Try to aim for flakes with more veggie content than high proteins; Spirulina flakes or Ocean Nutrition's "Formula Two" flakes (and frozen cubes) are great. Frozen prepared foods are great options.> Their 25 gallon tank is given 25% water changes (gravel is vacuumed) every Friday morning (they live on a very regular schedule- both feeding and cleaning- otherwise I have a tendency to forget!), water test: Nitrate 10 ppm, Nitrite 0 ppm, GH 60 ppm, KH 40, ph 7.2. I've read a lot about what sorts of food (aside from flakes) they can eat, but have found nothing in the way of how often it can be fed. <All sounds perfect. Do please keep greens in their diet!> I'm creating a small book (geared towards children, as they live in the lobby of a child psychiatry office) in hopes of promoting the both the joys and responsibilities of caring for fish. <A wonderful, noble endeavor, indeed! Thank you for taking the initiative to do something like this! I would be delighted to see it when finished, if possible.> Many of the patients have expressed interest in the hobby and I want to make sure I give accurate info (and make sure I'm not overfeeding the little guys!). Thanks very much for your help! -Jennifer <Again, a wonderful endeavor. Sounds like you are very much on the right track. Wishing you and your goldies well, -Sabrina> Goldfish Not eating 7/29/05 I have recently set up a new 20 litre starter tank following all the advice given by my local supplier. <This tank is too small...> After allowing this to stabilize for a couple of weeks I have stocked it with 2 goldfish. One seems to be fine but the other appears to be unable to eat and has been like this since I introduced it to the tank about a week ago. It seems to be eager to eat and approaches food but never makes any attempt to eat it and just noses the food about the tank. The fish seems unable to open its mouth and I suspected mouth rot could be a factor but there is no sign of redness or wasting of the mouth and no signs of fungal infection. It was fairly lively to begin with but is now more listless. I would be grateful for any advice you could give me. regards Sandy <Likely environmental... Please read here: http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwestcycling.htm and http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshsystems.htm and the linked files above. Bob Fenner> Floating goldfish 7/26/05 Hi there, I have an Oranda goldfish that floats on the top of the tank upside down shortly after every feeding. <A not uncommon developmental "disease" with roundish goldfish breeds, mis-feeding> I have changed food, and I also soak the food now before feeding her. It doesn't seem to help. Is there a special type of food for this type of bladder problem? Will it harm her health to float upside down? thank you, Freckles Mom <Yep... please read here: http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshfdgfaqs.htm and on to the many disease FAQs files linked above... or learn/use the Google search tool re goldfish swim bladder disease. Bob Fenner> Goldfish feeding 7/14/05 I have a 45 litre tank with filter, pump, and light with 5 goldfish: 1 fantail, 4 nymphs. One of my nymphs rarely eats any food. <Odd> I feed them fish flakes but that particular goldfish never comes up to the surface to eat and even when it does come up it gets scared of the other fish and runs away. Should I feed them food that sinks to the bottom? <Yes, I would... pellets, other fresh, frozen/defrosted foods> And also, how big can nymphs and fantails grow, and how long does it take? thanks Amanda <Both can attain several inches in length... but not in crowded, polluted conditions... Please read here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshsystems.htm Bob Fenner> Goldfish Not Eating Enough? We have 2 goldfish over 5 years old who have started spitting their food out. They were also breathing slightly heavily but a full water change appears to have sorted the breathing problems. We have also tried a different food and they still do the same. Otherwise they seem fine - swimming around and active. What could be causing them to do this and what needs to be done so they start eating normally? <When goldfish are small they seem to eat like pigs. They need to eat quite a bit because they need fuel to grow on. After awhile their metabolism slows down, they grow at a slower rate and they don't need to eat as much because they really don't require as much food. Feed them once a day and only enough food so that all of it is gone in two minutes once each day.-Chuck> Begging Goldfish Hello, thanks for the great site, v.v. helpful!! But I do have one question regarding my goldfish. I have 4 goldfish; 2 calico fantails, one (new) Sarasa comet, and one common goldie together in one tank. The fantails are about 1.5" each, the common is about 2.5", and the comet is less than 2". I feed them 3 foods in rotation (for variety) They get Daphnia, flakes, and floating pellets. They also have one live plant in their tank to munch on (don't know the name, but it is a green and bright purple plant with long leaves) I feed them 2 pinches of food in the morning, and 1 small pinch in the evening. However, they constantly seem hungry. Up to recently they did not always seem hungry. But since I introduced the comet last week they are always looking for more food. Am I feeding them enough? <Sound fine. Goldfish are famous for training their owners to over feed them. They will be fine being fed once or twice a day with as much as they can eat in a minute or so. Even skipping a day once a week is fine. The more you feed, the more water changes you will need to do. Goldfish produce a lot of ammonia in their waste. Don> Goldfish not eating I've had my goldfish for nearly 2 years. Over this time he has lost some scales and had the odd illness but has always been a happy fish. <Lost scales? From what?> Last week, however, he stopped eating and was sitting at the bottom of his tank, not eating and gasping and with rapid gill movement, as well as a very pale mucus appearance to his faeces. <Yikes.... please provide information re your set-up, particularly filtration... and maintenance procedures... do you change water regularly? Check your water chemistry? What do you feed, how often?> I treated him with Slime and Velvet control and a tonic which seemed to perk him up and he started eating again. I have made a water changes of around 30% since this and added a small amount more of his treatment with this. However, recently he has been swimming around his tank very slowly and not like his usual self, the mucus excrement has returned and he has not eaten for 4 days now, and the gasping and gill movement have returned, and he is now staying close to the surface of the water. I was just wondering if there is anything you could suggest that might help him, it's hard to see him so low when he's normally so happy. Any advice you could give me would be very much appreciated. Thank you, Kim. <Kim, something is definitely off here... very likely some aspect of your fish's environment... Do you have any ornament/decor that might be poisoning the system? Like a seashell or piece of metal in the tank? Please read through our section on goldfish, their husbandry: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/goldfish.htm see the blue files above? These are links... Please go through the articles on Systems and Disease. Bob Fenner> Anorexic Goldfish Hello Again, <Hi there> Well I was right, there was something wrong with my older fish Beau. He died five hours after I put the new fish Cow (named for his white and orange markings lol) in there. That first day Cow ate very well, almost like he was competing for food with Beau. But ever since Beau has been gone I haven't been able to get Cow to eat. I thought perhaps he didn't like flake food because the first time I fed him I'd fed them with crumbles I'd presoaked. so I fed him those instead, but he mostly ignored them. Every morning I feed him a few flakes hoping he's just not use to be fed from the top. <Good try> But every day when I come back from class it's still there. So in the evening I feed him crumbles and he hasn't eaten those either. I've read on your site that new fish sometimes don't eat, but the first day he did! Is he lonely? Or is there some other problem I should consider? Thank you for your help! <Not lonely... maybe just not used to these sorts of foods... like you waking up and having to eat everyday at the sushi bar... Do look into some other food formats... pellets that sink, frozen/defrosted, even some cooked, squished peas... and see if your goldfish will accept some of these... take care to remove any uneaten foods about five, ten minutes later. Bob Fenner> Goldfish questions Hello. <Hi- this is Jorie> I just want to ask a few questions about gold fish. My gold fish is fan tail. It is new. But I don't know how it can eat. I fed it once. Although the food is at the bottom, it doesn't eat. Is it normal? It may eat when it is hungry from the bottom? <It is entirely normal for new fish not to eat at first. How long have you had the new fish? What kind of food are you attempting to feed it? You can always try stimulating appetite with garlic oil extract, but at this time, it may just be a settling in period.> how many times should I feed it? <You should generally feed your fish one to three times per day, ONLY the amount they can consume within three minutes. Do not leave food lying around the bottom of the tank, as it will decay and cause toxin buildups in the tank. Having said that, are you familiar with the term "cycling" of a new tank? If not, I'd suggest you do a water change ASAP, trying to suck out any leftover food from the bottom. Try to match the temperature and pH of the new and old water as closely as possible. What you are doing is removing toxins such as ammonia, nitrites and/or nitrates, all of which will spike at some point prior to the "cycle" of the new tank being complete. These toxins are all very poisonous to fish and cannot remain in the water while fish are present. Do consider investing in a test kit to measure ammonia, nitrite and nitrate, along with pH, if you don't already have one. For now, though, just keep up with regular water changes and I suspect your fish will perk right up.> please give me an answer. Thank you........ <Good luck with your new fish. If you are new to the hobby, I recommend checking out a book called The Simple Guide to Freshwater Aquariums by David E. Boruchowitz - he's got some very good advice (except for his proposed stocking plans) that is quite easily digestible by beginners. I found it extremely helpful when I first started keeping FW fish. Jorie.> Goldfish not eating Hi my name is Tara. I have three goldfish and just got them yesterday. They are true comets. I believe these fish are not that old yet and they are not eating! I put food on the top of the water and they don't even come up to eat it. I pushed the food down after so it would sink and they still don't eat. This morning I tried to feed them a pea. Still they wouldn't so I took the skin of the pea and mushed it up. They just wont eat! I am very worried. I would like these fish alive. I love fish but 1.) how do I get them to eat and 2.) this is the first time I have had fish. How do I keep them nice and healthy and better yet alive! Please help me. Tara <Hi Tara, Don here. you just need to give them a couple of days to get use to their new home. It's normal for them to not eat for the first few days. Make sure you get any uneaten food out of the tank. The best advise I can give you is to keep the tank clean. But don't empty it out. Siphon out about 25% from the bottom using a gravel vac. Replace with fresh water. Do this every day or two for the fist two or three weeks. Once or twice a week after that. A big tank, a good filter and fresh water are key. Good luck with your goldfish> My goldfish wont eat ...I have 3 Dear Crew, hi my name is Tara. I have three goldfish and just got them yesterday they are true comets. I believe these fish are not that old yet and they are not eating ! I put food on the top of the water and they don't even come up to eat it. I pushed the food down after so it would sink and they still don't eat. This morning I tried to feed them a pea. still they wouldn't so I took the skin of the pea and mushed it up. They just wont eat! I am very worried I would like these fish alive I love fish but 1.) how do I get them to eat and 2.) this is the first time I have had fish how do I keep them nice and healthy and better yet alive! please help me please. Thank-you -Tara <Tara, Don't worry about your goldfish situation. Everyone is a beginner at least once in their life. Make sure your fish has fresh water and a big enough tank. I recommend at least one inch per 5 gallons of water. If you have a filter make sure you change 25% of the water weekly. It will help them to keep healthy. if they are in a bowl it will likely be too small for comets, (change the water daily until you can get a bigger tank). As for the food goes you are offering the right food just give them some time. Good Luck!! Mike B> Feeding Goldfish with a Sinking Boat. Hi, I heard from someone that there is an entertaining method to feed goldfish with a paper boat. Mainly with a paper boat, cut a small hole, put some food on the boat and wait it to sink slowly. Does such method exist? and how does it work exactly? is there any precise folding for the boat. Elisa >>>Hello Elisa, The boat must be made into an exact replica of the Titanic, or this method will not work. The food pellets must be placed on the paper Titanic precisely in order to represent doomed passengers. Balance the boat with food pellets in such a way so that the food pellet passengers fall off of the rear of the boat first. Once these passages are dead, the boat should break in half, allowing the pellets (passengers) on the front half to begin falling to their death. Make sure you place small pieces of paper in the water in the water with a pellet or three on each one. This represents the pellets/passengers that made it into a life boat. DO NOT let your goldfish eat these! Problems may result that are beyond the scope of this email. By the time Leonardo and his lady on the front of the boat (you can use a different type of food for these if you wish) are eaten, your goldfish should be well fed. As far as plans for folding the Titanic replica, I can't help you there, but you can do a search on the net. Please only feed your fish in this fashion twice a day. cheers Jim<<< Goldfish and lima Beans Hey! <Hey, right back-atcha!> Can gold fan-tailed fish eat lima beans? <Goldfish can have a variety of things in their diets, which I suggest you do with your fish. Though I have never fed lima beans to my goldfish I do offer them shelled peas and other vegetables. I would attempt Lima Beans once and see what the fish does. If it is possible to peel the harder outer skin off the lima before feeding it might make it easier for the fish. Remember a varied choice of food in your Goldfish's diet will increase it's health and it's longevity. I've had goldfish last many many years this way! -Em <Good luck with the Goldies! -Magnus> Goldfish food, feeding Hi, there. Just yesterday, I received a black moor as a "room warming" gift for my dorm room, and I named him Sirius (Sirius Black, get it?). It is my first fish EVER. However, when I fed him today, he just seems to suck the food in, and then spit it back out! The food that I gave him was Tetra Exotic Sinking Mini Sticks. Even the little bits that he sucks off the sticks he seems to spit out. He is a very energetic little guy, and he's very fond of swimming into the back of the tank (as if he's looking for something), and I can tell that he enjoys hunting the pellets...He just isn't swallowing them! Please, help me. I'm very worried. < You new little friend may have been raised on some other type of food and may take him awhile to get used to the new food and surroundings. They can go at least a week without eating so give him time. Only give him enough food so that it is all gone in a couple of minutes. Excess uneaten food causes ammonia problems so leave the food in there all day. Remove it in a couple of minutes after you feed. Eventually he will learn to eat quick.-Chuck> Jesse Goldfish Won't Eat I have checked and checked the
internet for help with my goldfish but cannot find my situation
anywhere. I have 3 goldfish in a 55 gallon tank (also 2 algae
eaters...1 large and 1 small...and 1 other little white bottom feeder
who never bothers anyone ever). They are almost 4 years old
and have been together since they were babies. I have tested the water
(pH, nitrate, nitrite, ammonia) and everything is perfect. One has
suddenly stopped eating. The other 2 are as active as
ever. The troubled one has always seemed a bit more
susceptible to stress than the other 2. There are no visible signs of
disease or infection. He just suddenly will not
eat. I feed my fish by hand a lot and he won't even eat
if I force the food to his mouth. He closes his mouth tight
and turns away. I know he's hungry because at first he
goes to the top to eat, then it's almost like he smells the food to
figure out what it is and decides to eat nothing. I feed them flakes,
floating pellets, sinking pellets, krill, blood worms, Tubifex worms
and brine shrimp. I don't think he's even eating the
sinking pellets...I can't wait forever to watch after I feed them,
but I think the other 2 fish may be the ones eating the pellets that
fall to the gravel. When I first noticed a problem developing, he would
only eat blood worms, now nothing at all. Since he hasn't eaten for
6 days now, I am really scared for him. Again, he is under
no signs of stress, no gasping for air, no flying around the tank or
against anything, he just won't eat. I do water changes daily,
anywhere from 5 to 10 gallons and I use a water conditioner to get rid
of the chlorine from the tap. The filter is undergravel with
3 bubble stones and a power head that I use only during daytime hours
to get as much oxygen in there as possible. Any help you can provide
would be greatly appreciated. If you need any more
information about my tank or the inhabitants, please let me know and I
will respond immediately. Thank you so much! Kim <<Dear Kim;
Goldfish are herbivores. It seems to me you are feeding them quite a
bit of protein! It may be wise to feed some Spirulina flake, buy a high
quality food with Spirulina as the FIRST ingredient listed on the
label. Also you can try to feed your goldfish some shelled peas (buy
frozen and cook them for 5 minutes), even broccoli heads (blanched to
soften). Your fish may be suffering from vitamin deficiencies. There
are liquid fish vitamins available at most decent pet stores, you can
soak your goldfish pellets once or twice a week, also, to ensure good
health. The other thing that caught my attention was the undergravel
filter. These do need proper maintenance. In other words, you should be
tearing your tank down every three months or so to completely clean
beneath the plastic grating, as this is where all the crud gets
trapped. This crud will break down organically, and add toxins to your
water. There are no test kits for these toxic gases (e.g. hydrogen
sulfide!). I generally try to talk people out of buying undergravels,
unless they are using reverse-flow powerheads on them, but even still,
they can give you headaches. There are SO many efficient, easy to
maintain hang-on advanced filters on the market nowadays that
undergravels are not necessary. If you have not cleaned the undergravel
filter in your tank, it is probably time to do so. There are
precautions to take, however. You can't remove the UG plate when
the fish are in the tank because if you disturb the substrate, you can
possibly release gases and instantly kill all the fish in the tank.
Yes, it happens! The best method is as follows: Carefully siphon 50% of
the tank water into a Rubbermaid bin on the floor. Catch all the fish
in the tank and transfer them to the bin. Try not to disturb any plants
or decor while you catch them. Transfer the heater, and put in an
airstone or secondary filter for aeration while you work on the tank.
Once the fish are removed, you can then remove all the decorations.
Live plants can be gently placed into another bucket, and covered with
damp paper towels or a bit more tank water. Remove the UG plate. Now
comes the tricky part...you need to clean the gravel without harming
the beneficial bacteria. NOT an easy chore, and the reason why UG
filters are so annoying. If you DON'T clean the UG filter, you risk
poisoning your fish, and if you DO clean the UG filter, you risk
ammonia spikes. At any rate, you should still have half a tank full of
water, so siphoning the gravel should be easy. If you run out of water
(siphons work fast...) just add a bit of new water, DE-chlorinated. If
you would prefer to remove the gravel and rinse it in a bucket, do so,
but again, use DE-chlorinated water, so you can try to preserve as much
bacteria as possible. You may still have an ammonia spike, but just
test the water and do the water changes accordingly. You can also add
Bio-Spira, found at your LFS. It is the ONLY biological support product
that I have found to actually work as it's supposed to. As you can
see, an undergravel filter can be a bit of work to have. You might want
to at least add additional filtration, like a Penguin BioWheel, so when
you DO have to clean your UG, you don't have to rely on it as the
sole provider of biological filtration. Or run your UG in reverse-flow.
Your LFS will have reverse-flow powerheads that you can buy for this
purpose. Best of luck! -Gwen>> Feeding Mishap My Goldfish Lucky is 8 years old. I have had him since he was a little grey fish. I won him at a carnival tossing balls into fishbowls. Anyways, my little cousin tried to feed him and poured a whole lot of food flakes in the tank. BY the time I realized it the food had been there some time. He was fine earlier but now he is floating upside down. I figure this is that bladder disease but I am concerned on what I should do first and if he will make it. He is strong, orange and about the size of my palm. He is not moving much and popping a little but still upside down. What steps should I take now to help him. Fasting...peas? I did change his water to get out the debris in his tank. Help!!-R <<Dear R, Is he a fantail or regular comet? How big is the tank, and what size water change did you do? How often do you normally do water changes? If possible, test the water for ammonia, nitrites, and nitrates, this will help us understand things better. Basically, he should not be floating. If you dump an entire container of food into a healthy tank, usually a few simple water changes are enough to save the day. This sounds more like a combination of not enough regular water changes followed by too much food being dumped and decaying over time, followed by a lack of oxygen, high ammonia, and who knows what else...how long was the food in the tank before you did the water change? Something tells me you will need to do quite a few more water changes before your fish will improve. I hope you can do so in time. -Gwen>> Goldfish and Pleco nutrition Hello- <Hello.> Right off hand id like to thank you for taking the time to read my message. <Glad to have the opportunity to help.> There area few things I'm am concerned about. Firstly, I'm worried that my goldfish are getting too much protein, and I had read that it is good to give them vegetables to balance out their system, but they wont eat anything except their fish food, and blood worms. They're completely uninterested in spinach, lettuce, nor will they eat tiny pieces of cut up carrots. They spit them right back out... I cant seem to find anything they like! <Try frozen/thawed peas (just squeeze the shell off), blanched zucchini or cucumber, and offer them some anacharis/elodea/Egeria plants to eat - these plants should be quite inexpensive at your local fish or pond store.> Also, I just bought a gold nugget plec. <Oh, one of my favorites!> I purchased algae wafers to drop in after my goldfish are fed for him to eat, because I don't recognize any significant amounts of algae... the goldfish are eating these. I'm worried he may not be getting the nutrition he needs either. <Well, to be honest, this plec (L-018/L-085, L-081, or L-177, all Baryancistrus sp.), is actually a meat eater. I doubt that he'll ever accept algae wafers, but he would benefit from a bit of blanched cucumber or zucchini once in a while. Offer him meaty foods, like frozen raw shrimp (just like you would eat), frozen bloodworms (from the fish store), or frozen prepared foods like Ocean Nutrition's "Formula One" (my meat-eatin' Hypancistrus plecs LOVE this).> Please help. I don't want my plec to starve or my fish to get sick or die!! <Try the above suggestions, I'm sure they'll take some of those offerings. The plec may be a bit tough to feed at first, as they're a bit skittish during the day, so you might try using a veggie-clip (like the ones for saltwater fish feeding) to get a piece of shrimp near him just after lights-out.> Thanks, -Shiga Ryukin <Wishing you and your fishes well, -Sabrina> Red Cap Goldfish feeding Thanks for the info, I have a 5 gallon water tank N I'm saving up to buy a bigger one ;0) I have on last Q. I bought floating pellets and I am only feeding him 5 that should be plenty right? <<Hello, yes, that should be okay. It's hard for me to tell you how much to feed, you have to use your best judgment. Just be sure that he eats all the food you give him. You do not want it to stay in the tank and pollute the water. -Gwen>> Constipated Goldfish? 3/16/04 <Hi, Pufferpunk here tonight> Dear Crew, I have two Comet Goldfish. One silver, the other orange. I have had them for almost 10 years. <That's great, you must be doing something right!> They are in a 30 gallon rectangular tank with a box filter an aerator. The silver one has developed a case of severe bloating in its lower abdomen. It's blown to almost 3 times its normal size. Its scales are not popping off, but its skin is becoming very stretched. This started almost 5 months ago and it only gets worse. I'm assuming that its constipation because the fish is lively and still eats. Also, I've read that fish usually die of parasites and whatnot within a few weeks. It does not hide in the corner and it seems to have its bearings correct. It does not float upside down. It still can dart very quickly around the tank. From what I understand about dropsy it does not exhibit any signs of it (scales normal, fins normal, behavior normal). There are no outward signs of infection of any kind. Only the silver fish has this condition. The orange fish is still lively as ever. At the start, I believed it to be some sort of bacterial infection. So, on the advice of the pet store guy I changed the water completely and treated the tank and fish with broad spectrum antibiotics. <Water changes are always good. I do 50% weekly water changes on all my tanks. Some say that on a goldfish tank, 90% weekly water changes is not considered too aggressive.> I followed the directions on the box for the full two weeks. No change in the fish. Then I suspected it to be constipation so I tried boiled and skinned peas for an entire week. I gave up on that when the fish exhibited no change except for a more bloated abdomen. I went back to the pet store. The guy told me to try internal parasite meds (I don't recall the name). That didn't work. A month after that, I heard about giving the fish some peas AND spinach. I tried that, no change. I've been going on and off of peas for the remainder of the time. <Peas certainly can't hurt & are a good addition to any GF's diet.> I read in an email answer (archived on your website) that sometimes the intestine is obstructed and there is nothing that can be done. However, for the past 5 months the fish has been--albeit slowly--defecating. This morning I saw it expel some fibrous green stuff (I'm assuming its peas/spinach) along with what appeared to be two air bubbles in the "sausage casing." <That's normal. I'm glad it's still defecating.> I don't want it to die because of something like constipation. <I'd like to see you try adding Epsom salt to it's tank (or a quarantine tank, if you have one). 1tbsp/5gal for 2 weeks. Do 50% water changes every other day adding whatever salt you have removed. See if that helps. If not, write again & we'll see what else we can come up with.> Please give me your advice. Thanks. - Paul P.S. I read somewhere that giving the fish some cod liver oil via a dropper in its mouth will relieve constipation, but it sounds risky and I'm a little skeptical. <Please capitalize your "I"s next time, I have to fix all of them before posting your question on our site. Try the Epsom salt 1st--PP> Peas for Goldfish? 1/15/04 hey another quick question, what kind of pea and does it have to be a frozen one, can it come out of a can? <Frozen is better (thawed, of course)> Oranda goldfish Thank you for responding. When you say frozen goldfish food do you mean frozen daphnia and brine shrimp? <Goldfish will eat anything they can, though I have found that mine aren't quick to eat the brine shrimp.> If so, I started feeding them that and then read that too much protein can cause swim bladder so I stopped. <To much protein isn't especially bad, just that goldfish (carp) tend to eat more plant matter in their diet. don't feed exclusively meaty foods, it's best to have a broad based feeding mix.> I feed them now either the sinking pellets or Tetrafin flake food. A small amount twice a day. Thank you. Kim <That is my feeding schedule as well. And my goldfish are quite happy. good luck -Magnus.> It's a Floater, Not a Sinker.. >Hello, >>Greetings. >I have a question about my goldfish. >>Ok. >I have searched the web and your site looking for an answer and it all seems so contradictory that I am unsure how to treat, if at all. Here is some background. I have two goldfish, fantail I think, one is gold and one is calico. I received them as a gift in Sept. and have grown especially fond of them. I am unsure how old they are, they are about an inch long or what sex they are. >>If only an inch, they are still quite juvenile. >They live in a 20 gal. tank with a few live plants, a bit of gravel, and some of that black substrate stuff that the plants are supposed to love, and a piece of wood (like drift wood but it sits on the bottom). There is also a 1.5 inch Japanese algae eater of some kind in there that is doing a good job keeping the brown algae down and keeps to itself. There is a filter that aerates the tank a bit and cleans the water. Every ten days, I take out 20-25% of the water and replace it. Once, I took a sample of water to the pet store to test and everything was good. The fish are especially "clowny" when I come around and seem to have a lot of vitality. >>Sounds good, though if you're very good at keeping them, they will quickly outgrow that tank. I see a minimum 55-60 gallon tank in their future. >So here is the problem, the orange fish, who I call Jane, was trying to expel a poop today that was unusual. It was normal looking at the very end, the the rest of it looked clear, with bubbles possibly, that was kinked like link sausage. It extended from "her" anus, I am guessing, to the end of "her" tail. It took her apx. 10-15 minutes to shake loose of it. It really wanted to get it off it seemed. The feces floated to the top and I swooped it out to get a better look, I couldn't tell much. It is like it popped or I smooshed it and there wasn't anything there. So after searching the web, I have read this possibly associated with everything to dropsy, shedding eggs, fish gulping bubbles, internal parasites, constipation, malnutrition... I think that is all. But I am left with trying to discern if there is anything to do. >>MOST likely you have fancy goldies (short, fat bodies, yes?). In which case, MOST likely they're gulping air when they eat. There are a couple of things you'll need to do. First, they'll need to get a bit of vegetable matter into their regular diet. Frozen peas, squeezed out of their skins are excellent for them. They and the algae eater my also enjoy a small slice of zucchini, microwaved a short bit to help break down the cellulose, and weighted down left on the bottom of the tank. Only leave that in for a day. As for staple food, you need to start feeding sinking pellets and/or flake. This is the best way to ensure that they don't swallow air (this is VERY common for fancy goldies, by the way). Another EXCELLENT treat (they'll go NUTS for this) are mosquito larvae and daphnia ( http://www.petfish.net/daph.htm ). Do know that this will not only get them to grow quite quickly, but once spring time comes around it will help spur on breeding. >This fish is happy, seemingly healthy, eats whenever I put food in there. I feed them 1-2 times per day a small pinch of dry flake food. The only unusual behavior I noticed is tonight, since the poo, the fish is vigorous in shaking its back end. >>Probably doing a "fish fart" kinda thing. >Any advice? I am also finding contradictory information on how big these fish will grow - any idea? >>If nothing but a pond comet, they can hit 10" if given enough space and water volume. If a fancy, I've seen them as big as 8". Fancies are much more demanding and delicate, require lower water movement, no sharp objects in their tank, and no other rough or fast swimming fish or they may get injured. >Thank you in advance for your time as well as all of the info you provide in general. Kris >>You're welcome, and crack open that bag o' peas ASAP. Offer only SMALL amounts, you don't want to pollute the tank. If there is too much food left over, just do a small water change siphoning out what you can get. If it's a big water change, that won't hurt them at all (it's actually pretty good for them). Marina Popeye the (orange) black moor Hi There! <Hi, Teri! Sabrina here this gorgeous afternoon> I have a few questions for ya'll. I have a Black Moor (about 3 years, 6 inches), a Blue Scale Oranda (2 years 8 inches), a Red and White Oranda? (Not sure what type it is, it was in a tank with BS Orandas when we bought it but it is all white with some orangish/red on top, about 1 year 6 inches) <Likely a redcap Oranda> and a Plecostomus (3 years, 10 inches) and a small Red Platy (1 month 1 1/2 to 2 inches). We have a nice sized 30 gallon tank (I know we are a bit over stocked, in the process of looking for a larger tank to accommodate everyone.) <Yes, and great to hear about the upgrade - which will be much fun, I'm sure!> and the Red Platy seems to be doing great in the colder water. <It would do even better in a warmer tank.> We use an AquaTech 20 to 40 gallon filter and use a bubble wall but no under gravel filter. I test the water weekly, change 20% of the water monthly, <It might be a good idea to increase the frequency of your water changes - maybe 20% twice monthly.> clean the filter weekly and replace it with a new one once a month. We feed them dry floating pond pellets for the Orandas and the Moor, <A constant diet of dry foods may cause problems for the goldfish; please try to incorporate more veggie matter into their diet (blanched zucchini, prepared frozen veggie fish foods, etc.) and plants like anacharis/elodea.> and algae disks for the Plecostomus (since algae seems not to grow in my tank), <blanched zucchini will be an excellent food for this guy, too, along with the occasional frozen meaty food. It'd also be a good idea to get a piece of driftwood or bogwood in there for him to nibble on.> and very small dry tropical pellets for the Red Platy, and for a nice treat every now and then a slice cucumber. <Cucumber's excellent, too. Do please blanch this before using (drop it into a pot of boiling water very shortly, let it cool). You can blanch a whole sliced up zucchini or cucumber, then freeze the slices for later use.> Now for the questions. My Black Moor has one eye that is larger then the other. It was like this when we purchased it about 3 years ago. It wasn't as noticeable as it has gotten recently. In fact, in the last 2 months it has become A LOT larger then the other eye. I gather from the site that he might have Pop eye. Is it possible that they can live 3 years with this problem, or is that the problem? <This does sound like pop eye. Usually, this is an indicator of water quality issues. Please check your ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate, and do water changes to bring anything too high back down. You may want to consider treating him with Epsom salts at a rate of 1-2 tablespoons per ten gallons of water - best to do this in a hospital tank.> Also he has remained very active and still has a good appetite. He has started to change colors (from all black to clear tail fins on the ends that fade to orange and then back to black closer to the body, and his tummy has turned completely orange. It is rather pretty this way, but it's a Black Moor not a Changing Color Moor, so something is wrong.) <This is perfectly normal, no need to worry. Color change in goldfish may possibly be attributable to temperature changes, pH changes, or maybe even age. It is certainly not unheard of for black moors to gain some gold color.> so I'm assuming I need to change his diet also? <I would, but only to get them onto a better diet of veggie stuff for health reasons; this won't affect coloration.> Secondly, I tried to introduce live plants about a month back and I woke up the other morning and the fish seemed to have had a night on the town with my plant. It was a very lush Ivy (tons of leaves) <I trust you mean 'Ivy' descriptively, and that this was an aquatic plant, not really an ivy?> that by the morning had nothing but 2 leaves, a stem and a few roots. My fish had devoured the whole plant. Is that a bad thing? <As long as this was an aquatic plant, nope, no problemo. It's a very good idea for them to have a bit of aquatic plants in their diet; as above, anacharis/elodea will be the cheapest, best bet to feed them. If you want plants in the tank for aesthetic purposes, though, there are a few plants that the goldfish *won't* eat - Anubias sp., java fern, and java moss are all very easy to grow and will be safe from your little herbivores.> They haven't seemed to act odd, but that was a lot of plant to eat. <It was probably yummy ;) > Should I cut back on their food for a few days? Or try and feed them more so they don't starve? I know it's an odd question but I'm afraid of over feed. <Just modify their diet to include more green goodies.> Third, with this many fish should I look into getting an under gravel filter or is it just an optional thing? <I wouldn't. But I'm rather opinionated on this. I usually don't recommend them for the reason that it's very difficult to keep the space under the filter plates free of debris, which will rot and cause nitrate problems. Some folks use and love UGFs, though.> What should I be doing to help keep the rocks clean? I have a gravel vacuum that I use once every 6 or 7 months but other then that I don't do anything to the rocks. <Oh my.... vacuum the gravel more like monthly.... Better yet, increase your 20% water changes to be twice a month, and do part of the gravel on each water change. I would imagine you currently have a rather high amount of nitrate in the tank - possibly contributing to the pop eye in the moor.> I was told you should never disturb/clean the rocks so what good does a under gravel filter do? <Undergravel filters turn your entire substrate into biological filter media. They can be really Good Things, but again, in your case especially, I wouldn't recommend it. And whoever told you not to clean your gravel.... well, I don't know what they were smoking, but I don't want any.> Also are my water changing techniques alright or should I be changing more then 20% every month? <As above.> Why wont algae grow? We leave the light on during the day, but there isn't in any natural daylight. I figured that the artificial light would create enough light to grow enough for my Plecostomus, but he doesn't seem to be getting any bigger. Lack of algae or to small of a tank? <The goldfish and the plec are probably eating it before it has a chance to be seen. Again, more veggies in their diet....> Any help would be great and I appreciate it. Love the site, very helpful! Teri <Thanks, Teri! Hope all goes well with your tank, and I wish your moor a speedy recovery! -Sabrina> Re: Eat your veggies! I heard that you can feed your fish peas. Is this true? IF so should I crush them up? How small. I have three Orandas and four regular gold fish (the 24 cent fish) the biggest fish is about 4 inches. Does the biggest fish still need his peas crushed? What other foods can I feed my fish? Megan <Peas can be given once in a while but not on a daily basis. Feeding your fish the inside of a thawed pea (no, it doesn't have to be crushed, just peeled) will help prevent constipation. It's best to feed your fish mainly a diet of normal fish food but other good treats are green beans (canned), zucchini (steamed with peel removed), and even a bit of lettuce once in a great while. Ronni> Re: Goldfish Spitting Food Hi, <Hello> I just found your great website - I just wish I had found it earlier. I bought two fish in September - one of them, a black moor, got swim bladder problems and seemed very distressed so I thought it was kinder to put him out of his misery a couple of weeks ago. The other one is a normal goldfish and is in a 10 gallon tank with a filter and air. About a week ago I noticed that she had swelled up a little in the abdomen and she has started to spit out her food. I have been feeding her on flakes which, having read your site, I will change. Her eating seems very labored - she chews and chews and then - 70% of the time will spit the food out and go and try another piece. I am crushing the flakes very small for her as this seems to help a bit. <Possibly dropsy. Look closely at her sides, are the scales sticking straight out? If so, this is definitely dropsy and can be treated with one of the Maracyns, available at most LFS.> I read somewhere that this can indicate fluke infestation and I dosed the tank with Goldfish Parasite Guard 6 days ago and repeated (with a water change) after 4 days but so far it doesn't seem to be any better. <This could be a possibility if the scales aren't sticking straight out. There is info on a safe treatment for flukes at http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshdisfaqs.htm> She is very active - swimming around a lot and playing in the bubbles of the aeration - she is a lovely little fish and I would really appreciate if you could recommend what else I could try to make her better. Also, suggestions on what to feed her - I keep seeing peas mentioned - are these good? <The activity is a good sign. Peas definitely will not hurt her, just don't give them very often as they serve as a laxative. They are recommended when fish are constipated but can be given once in a while even if they aren't. Most fish will readily eat them and thoroughly enjoy them. Use a thawed frozen pea and take the shell off of it so all you are feeding is the very soft inside.> Many thanks for your help, Kind Regards, Miriam <You're welcome. Ronni> Re: snails-Ramshorn Thank you in regards to the question of sex of the single birthing mother snail. Now another for you please. I have 3 large goldfish or carp now, and was wondering if I can put snails in the same tank without them getting eaten. <This should work out fine. These minnow fishes don't generally eat snails> Also, I do not use a heater in my carp tank, just room temperature, and do have snails born in another tank I have that have a heater, will they survive the temperature of room and if yes or no, can you tell me some names of snails that can survive with my carp in room temperature. tanks, Paul <This also should be fine. Please see here re your last question: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/PondSubWebIndex/pdsnails.htm Most all of the larger species of snails sold in our interest (particularly of the genus Pomacea (= Ampullaria) will do well. Bob Fenner> Help with a Constipated Gold Fish Hi Robert, <<Not
actually Robert, but Jason filling in while Bob is away diving.>>
Mike Kobert recommended I contact you as I seem to have a problem with
one of my goldfish. I have a 50 gallon hex tank with a split tail fancy
gold fish, a red cap and a junior black moor. The gold fish and red cap
are very large. A couple of months ago I changed food and my very large
black moor started to swell up. I discontinued food and researched
problem. He apparently was constipated or had dropsy (sp?) Anyway, I se
up a hospital tank with the Epsom salt treatment per the book
recommendations. The moor eventually died. <<I am sorry to
hear this.>> Now my Gold fish (very large) is swollen and I
haven't seen him poop for weeks. <<uh oh...>> Do
you recommend any other course of action besides he Epsom salt
treatment. <<have a recent account from another reason who
had a similar problem with his clownfish. His solution was to add
fish-oil to the food. You might want to try this.>> It
didn't seem to work for the moor. <<No, it didn't
did it, but unfortunately this type of problem can only go on for so
long before it will kill the fish, so the Epsom salts may have come a
little too late.>> Do you think I should try to manipulate
(squeeze) the blockage out? <<not unless you are very
familiar with the fish's physiology - no guarantee you won't
squeeze something in the wrong direction.>> I am at a loss
and we have had him for a few years - hate to see him go to fish
heaven! <<It would be unfortunate to be certain. Do try the
fish-oil.>> Mike says your the man when it comes to goldfish.
I'd really appreciate any advise you can give me.
<<hope that's helpful.>> Thanks! Ted Burgess
<<You are welcome - Cheers, J -- >> RE: Goldfish help Can you tell me what kinds of food besides
flakes to be feeding my goldfish? <fresh frozen green foods for a
good staple, Spirulina enriched pellets, and do read further here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwfoods,fdg,nutr.htm Best
regards, Anthony> Re: feeding peas to fantails Hello! I recently found your website and have found it to be very informative! Thank you! In browsing your site I read that I should be feeding my goldfish peas. I have started doing so and they LOVE them. I have one that will actually eat them from my fingertips! Now for my questions...how often should I feed them peas? <Daily if possible> I also feed them Tetra Fin flake food and a floating pellet that my sister feeds to her pond goldfish. Is there other food products that I should be feeding them? <Yes, items that are more "meaty" (like frozen/defrosted Mysids, Brine Shrimp), and even rice (cooked), other green vegetables (better blanched or microwaved than fresh). To take care to not feed dried-prepared foods to heavily to "round-shaped" goldfish varieties... as there is a "positive correlation" between this practice and developmental disorders ("gas-bladder disease", "fatty infiltration disease")> I have 7 in a 55 gallon tank ( I know, I know! I am 2 over what you recommend for that size tank but they are small fish right now.) I also have 3 snails, 1 frog and 2 live plants. Thanks for any info you can provide! Keep up the great service.....greatly appreciated!!! Kerry
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