I was just checking the weather, and we have a balmy -36 due tonight. The intense cold is usually only a couple of weeks, but it has a huge effect on fishkeeping in one specific way new aquarists should be aware of. It's a problem that can develop by about -10, depending on what your water setup is.
If I were to do a water change in the next 48 hours. I could seriously harm or even kill some of my fish. If your water comes out of the tap (or a water changing hose) greyish, super-saturated with oxygen bubbles, then too much of a good thing is at play. Cooler water holds more oxygen, and really cold water holds too much. It can do cellular damage to gills.
It's a north of the equator northern issue, and I'm sure northern Australian aquarists getting plus 35 tapwater can't commiserate. But if you are in that great band of population that stretches across the hard winter zones of North America, Europe and Asia, it's a short term issue to be aware of. It's the only thing that knocks me off my regular weekly water change routine.
I learned the hard way.... and I'll be waiting for a window of slightly warmer winter early next week. This is a tough town to be a tropical fish in.
If I were to do a water change in the next 48 hours. I could seriously harm or even kill some of my fish. If your water comes out of the tap (or a water changing hose) greyish, super-saturated with oxygen bubbles, then too much of a good thing is at play. Cooler water holds more oxygen, and really cold water holds too much. It can do cellular damage to gills.
It's a north of the equator northern issue, and I'm sure northern Australian aquarists getting plus 35 tapwater can't commiserate. But if you are in that great band of population that stretches across the hard winter zones of North America, Europe and Asia, it's a short term issue to be aware of. It's the only thing that knocks me off my regular weekly water change routine.
I learned the hard way.... and I'll be waiting for a window of slightly warmer winter early next week. This is a tough town to be a tropical fish in.