David J
Fishaholic
Hi
Just thought I'd share my experiences today in 2 different fish shops.
Some of you may see in one of my other threads that I am doing a fishless cycle. Eaglesaquarium has been helping me along and has been brilliant. I am 3 weeks in. Ammonia and Nitrite are pretty much always processing over 24 hours and I'm trying to get it to process in 12 hours. The ammonia is ok but my nitrites are off the chart high after 12 hours but are gone after 24 hours.
So, today I decided to go into a couple of aquatic shops to look at plants and also try and pick up some rocks and of course spend far too much time looking at fish that I can't get yet
In the first shop, when I went to pay for 2 rocks I chose, the guy asked me what kind of tank I had etc etc. I explained my situation and took the opportunity to ask if he had any advice. As soon as I mention 'fish less cycle' the guys attitude clearly changed for the worse. I swear, he took at step back and looked at me like had 2 heads. There was a silence, to the point that I thought he was just going to pretend I wasn't there until I walked away. Finally, he told me that he had heard about the odd person doing a fishless cycle but he always does fish in cycling. He told me that 99 out of 100 people do fish in. He then said that he advises customers to put water in the tank, run it for about 7 days and put fish in. His colleague had appeared by this time and he confirmed what the first guy had said.
Before this conversation I had wandered round the shop and found 3 dead fish and one of them had clearly been dead for quite some time as other fish had started to eat it. While at the counter I noticed 3 small vases that looked like flower vases. They were about 10 inches tall and half full of water with some fake plants and pebbles in. Each of them had a betta in. I'm no expert but it just didn't look right. My partner then realised that one of them was dead.
Needless to say, I won't be back there, I won't name the shop. It wasn't one of the big chains, it was a one off local shop.
Then, I went to my local branch of maidenhead aquatics in Leith, Edinburgh. The same type if conversation opened up there and the 2 guys there immediately agreed that I am doing the right thing with the fishless cycle. They chatted for a good while about it and asked me lots of questions and confirmed that I was doing exactly the right thing. They chatted away for ages about different fish etc and were really helpful and knowledgable. While I was chatting, a man and woman came up and asked if they could gt a couple of fish. The shopkeeper asked which ones so he knew which bags to bring. They said 'it 2 fish, ones orange and the other ones blue' and they wandered off to lead him. The guy was clearly concerned and I heard him start to ask lots if questions about where these fish were going etc etc. it was really good to see that they won't just sell anything to anyone that asks.
2 very different experiences which I thought I'd share. It might be useful for complete noobs (even more nooby than me) to be aware of this and to be very cautious when taking advice from 'experienced' fishkeepers.
Regards,
David
Just thought I'd share my experiences today in 2 different fish shops.
Some of you may see in one of my other threads that I am doing a fishless cycle. Eaglesaquarium has been helping me along and has been brilliant. I am 3 weeks in. Ammonia and Nitrite are pretty much always processing over 24 hours and I'm trying to get it to process in 12 hours. The ammonia is ok but my nitrites are off the chart high after 12 hours but are gone after 24 hours.
So, today I decided to go into a couple of aquatic shops to look at plants and also try and pick up some rocks and of course spend far too much time looking at fish that I can't get yet
In the first shop, when I went to pay for 2 rocks I chose, the guy asked me what kind of tank I had etc etc. I explained my situation and took the opportunity to ask if he had any advice. As soon as I mention 'fish less cycle' the guys attitude clearly changed for the worse. I swear, he took at step back and looked at me like had 2 heads. There was a silence, to the point that I thought he was just going to pretend I wasn't there until I walked away. Finally, he told me that he had heard about the odd person doing a fishless cycle but he always does fish in cycling. He told me that 99 out of 100 people do fish in. He then said that he advises customers to put water in the tank, run it for about 7 days and put fish in. His colleague had appeared by this time and he confirmed what the first guy had said.
Before this conversation I had wandered round the shop and found 3 dead fish and one of them had clearly been dead for quite some time as other fish had started to eat it. While at the counter I noticed 3 small vases that looked like flower vases. They were about 10 inches tall and half full of water with some fake plants and pebbles in. Each of them had a betta in. I'm no expert but it just didn't look right. My partner then realised that one of them was dead.
Needless to say, I won't be back there, I won't name the shop. It wasn't one of the big chains, it was a one off local shop.
Then, I went to my local branch of maidenhead aquatics in Leith, Edinburgh. The same type if conversation opened up there and the 2 guys there immediately agreed that I am doing the right thing with the fishless cycle. They chatted for a good while about it and asked me lots of questions and confirmed that I was doing exactly the right thing. They chatted away for ages about different fish etc and were really helpful and knowledgable. While I was chatting, a man and woman came up and asked if they could gt a couple of fish. The shopkeeper asked which ones so he knew which bags to bring. They said 'it 2 fish, ones orange and the other ones blue' and they wandered off to lead him. The guy was clearly concerned and I heard him start to ask lots if questions about where these fish were going etc etc. it was really good to see that they won't just sell anything to anyone that asks.
2 very different experiences which I thought I'd share. It might be useful for complete noobs (even more nooby than me) to be aware of this and to be very cautious when taking advice from 'experienced' fishkeepers.
Regards,
David