Korki Buchek
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- Dec 30, 2006
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My story begins about three months ago at Petco. As I searched through row upon row of poor veil tail bettas in those terrible plastic containers with dirty water one piqued my interest. He was smallish, red with teal spots on his face, and looked calm compared to the other fish that were turning round and round to flare at their neighbors (also in those terrible plastic containers). I picked him up, got all of the supplies I thought I needed: 1.5 gallon bowl, small rocks to put in the bottom, a plant, tap water cleaning tablets, a bottle of that mediciny stuff you put in to prevent (or cure) bacteria, and a small heater in case he got cold. I set him up in the bowl and he lived happily ever after, or so I thought. I fed him, played with him, taught him to do tricks and took care of him. A cold streak hit and I began using the heater. It lasted for about a week and he seemed to like the temperature and became more active when the water was a little warmer. One day the heater made his water a little too hot and I found him dead in the bowl. The heater soon died as well probably from foul play, but I won't admit to it.
About a week ago I got another fish, and I want to make sure this one doesn't end up the same way. Unfortunately, he doesn't look to be off to a good start. I have a handful of questions that will hopefully help this one live a little (or maybe a lot) longer.
1) He won't eat anything. I've tried worms, pellets, flakes, and the little pea mush with garlic salt on the end of a toothpick. He won't even try to eat from the top of the bowl. If something falls down he sometimes chews on it and then spits it out. The toothpick with the pea scares him. I'm hoping this is just stress from being moved around, but how long will he last without food? If he gets hungry enough will he start eating? What else can I do?
2) It looks like he can see his reflection in the bowl and it is scaring him. He sits in one corner of the bowl a lot staring at the glass and sometimes tries to bite the bowl, realizes he can't and then swims away. After a little while he returns to the corner and starts the process over. Can I do anything to prevent this like covering the bowl with something? Should I try that or just let him get used to the reflection?
3) Whenever I put the medicine drops in the bowl, the water gets cloudy and looks like it is dirty. Is this normal?
4) Would the heaters suggested in the FAQ section work for a 2 gallon bowl (I had to retire the old bowl after it also died from suspicious causes)? If so what temperature should I set it at? I hear around 78-80 is best, is that right?
5) I'm pretty sure I should take the gravel out of the bowl and put something in so that he can see the food that falls down. What should I use?
6) How many pellets per day do I feed him? The pet store people say three (which I assume is wrong) and the container says somewhere between 6 and 12 per day (which I also assume is wrong), bettatalk says as many as he can eat in 5 minutes.
7) Anything else that I need to know to keep him healthy and happy or any stupid betta tricks that I can teach him?
Thank you for helping me save my new wet pet.
Sincerely,
Korki Buchek (Kazakh pop superstar of famous song "Bing Bang")
About a week ago I got another fish, and I want to make sure this one doesn't end up the same way. Unfortunately, he doesn't look to be off to a good start. I have a handful of questions that will hopefully help this one live a little (or maybe a lot) longer.
1) He won't eat anything. I've tried worms, pellets, flakes, and the little pea mush with garlic salt on the end of a toothpick. He won't even try to eat from the top of the bowl. If something falls down he sometimes chews on it and then spits it out. The toothpick with the pea scares him. I'm hoping this is just stress from being moved around, but how long will he last without food? If he gets hungry enough will he start eating? What else can I do?
2) It looks like he can see his reflection in the bowl and it is scaring him. He sits in one corner of the bowl a lot staring at the glass and sometimes tries to bite the bowl, realizes he can't and then swims away. After a little while he returns to the corner and starts the process over. Can I do anything to prevent this like covering the bowl with something? Should I try that or just let him get used to the reflection?
3) Whenever I put the medicine drops in the bowl, the water gets cloudy and looks like it is dirty. Is this normal?
4) Would the heaters suggested in the FAQ section work for a 2 gallon bowl (I had to retire the old bowl after it also died from suspicious causes)? If so what temperature should I set it at? I hear around 78-80 is best, is that right?
5) I'm pretty sure I should take the gravel out of the bowl and put something in so that he can see the food that falls down. What should I use?
6) How many pellets per day do I feed him? The pet store people say three (which I assume is wrong) and the container says somewhere between 6 and 12 per day (which I also assume is wrong), bettatalk says as many as he can eat in 5 minutes.
7) Anything else that I need to know to keep him healthy and happy or any stupid betta tricks that I can teach him?
Thank you for helping me save my new wet pet.
Sincerely,
Korki Buchek (Kazakh pop superstar of famous song "Bing Bang")