Quote:
Originally Posted by smartie2000
I normal freshwater set up?....it's 80 gallon with a filter
I do keep normal bodied fish and they are much more virgorous.
I have like an estimated 300 gallon for koi and a 29gallon for cichlids, and I once kept normal looking goldfish in a ceramic bowl just fine (like how the ancient chinese did it centuries ago)
I think I can conclude that his breeding for round shapes on goldfish are making them harder to keep. I have already started making my own food because I read comercial food have been causing trouble making them float. I havent had any floating problems since my own food for 3/4 a year. They were doing fine with this new food until I allowed the water to get slightly more dirty than usually...lets give me dropsy and more dropsy! and when they die the water get dirty and if I'm too busy to change it then lets die some more! Sorry four fish died recently and they were all my large ones.
I do not think I can keep these guys in cermamic bowls like I did with normal bodied goldfish. And it is somewhat of a sick business because I am sure I am not the only one with dead ornamental goldfish
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smartie2000, yep you know your stuff
and I have experienced dropsy in the past I hate it!
Whenever some one says their goldfish dying I'm always thinking- what size body of water are they in [? as they can grow
big plus a bowl has limited water to air surface contact, not much space to swim in or for a filtration system], do they do water changes, over feed the fish and are they overcrowded.
I have kept them before in good health [and I also I had a huge pond once that I built myself with them in it where they grew
huge and bred like crazy] but the last ones I had I sold when I moved house.
Here is what a book I have says on goldfish:
"Captive breeding has resulted in some, to our way of thinking, horrendous strains being produced. Some have enlarged, bulbous eyes (celestials and bubble-eyes) and these require special care, ensuring that there are no sharp objects on which the fishes can damage themselves. Yet others have been
bred to enhance cancerous growths on their heads (lionheads) [my emphasis added]."
Also:
"A twin-tailed goldfish is, again, a fish for the aquarium. Hobbyists, especially in the Far East, have selectively bred these fishes to such an extent that many can no longer swim properly because of the excess drag produced by their over-elongated finnage."
I've read Koi need lots of room, immaculate water and a heavy filtration system?
I've kept some cichlids before angels. I've bred them, corydoras, bristlenose almost got there with honey gouramis but now I've only got one tank a wider than usual 3fter with pencil fish, glowlight tetras, corydoras, borneo suckermouth catfish, an old male bristlenose, 3 clown loaches and a sole surviving female emperor tetra.
It has two cannister filters [one running though a cylinder fed Co2 reactor] 120 Watts fluros lighting, a very fine gravel substrate and planted with crypts, anubias, swords, java moss/fern, aponogeton because I got sick of trimming those fast growing stem plants!
I don't do as much water changes as I should on it
but then again I only feed them 4-5 days out of every 7 days.