Devorax
Fish Crazy
Wondering around town today, I went in to our LFS to buy our dog something special for his 8th birthday, and knowing it was also the day after their aquatic delivery, I thought about having a looksy to see if there was anything worthy of spending a few quid on. And the horror.....
There were three tanks with 2 male bettas in, both with very heavy fin damage, (and one pair in particular which I will come back to), there was a dead angel in one tank, the guppy tank had one surviving betta in it and one dead being slowly eaten by the common plec in there. The guppies themselves had very deeply split tails on some individuals (although some were in perfect visual condition and I would surely have loved to taken them weren't it for lack of tank).
Oh it was a house of horrors. The shop owner himself wasn't there but his wife was and she and a colleague were just happily chatting away behind the till, oblivious to the problems. She even fished out a convict, passing the dead fish, and did nothing about them. Half the tanks had at least one dead former resident.
The clown loaches are all very pale, huddling together in the corners, terrified to move, some of them appeared dead beneath the others. The rummies were so pale they were almost transparent, ugh, it was horrendous.
There were 2 bettas (the ones I said I'd come back to) that were together in a tank with what mighth have been glolight tetras. At first we thought there was only one, but as he moved toward the filter, he shot away as if he'd been electrocuted, and a hidden second emerged, only to fall below the sunken heater (laid on the sand) and stay put. The first then darted around the tank through approx 30/40 tetras and couldn't stop himself from going crazy as they shoal moved in perfect singular motion thus confusing him about where he was going.
The betta in with the guppies then nearly came home with us out of pity, he looked soooo scared, huddling up in the corner terrified in case a guppy came near (there were 30 or more), but then we couldn't decide if we should save him or the one panicking in the tetra tank. I said to take both, but then we thought that if we take any then we would be encouraging the shop owner to continue in their cruelty. It was a REALLY tough call. Me myself I would have said sod it and taken the lot, but it ain't my house and there wasn't the tank space available, so there was a perfectly good arguement against it. Besides, this time in a fortnight, the exact same situation would have only been repeated.
Anyway, the whole point of mentioning all this is:
Will the RSPCA/Trading Standards/Animal Welfare Officer do anything if I report the establishment for blatant cruelty? What do you think? Was it the right thing to leave the 2 bettas behind? I was thinking of them see, I know they would have done okay but just couldn't justify it outright. Preventing cruelty is perfectly okay, but encouraging it to be repeated is quite different.....
There were three tanks with 2 male bettas in, both with very heavy fin damage, (and one pair in particular which I will come back to), there was a dead angel in one tank, the guppy tank had one surviving betta in it and one dead being slowly eaten by the common plec in there. The guppies themselves had very deeply split tails on some individuals (although some were in perfect visual condition and I would surely have loved to taken them weren't it for lack of tank).
Oh it was a house of horrors. The shop owner himself wasn't there but his wife was and she and a colleague were just happily chatting away behind the till, oblivious to the problems. She even fished out a convict, passing the dead fish, and did nothing about them. Half the tanks had at least one dead former resident.
The clown loaches are all very pale, huddling together in the corners, terrified to move, some of them appeared dead beneath the others. The rummies were so pale they were almost transparent, ugh, it was horrendous.
There were 2 bettas (the ones I said I'd come back to) that were together in a tank with what mighth have been glolight tetras. At first we thought there was only one, but as he moved toward the filter, he shot away as if he'd been electrocuted, and a hidden second emerged, only to fall below the sunken heater (laid on the sand) and stay put. The first then darted around the tank through approx 30/40 tetras and couldn't stop himself from going crazy as they shoal moved in perfect singular motion thus confusing him about where he was going.
The betta in with the guppies then nearly came home with us out of pity, he looked soooo scared, huddling up in the corner terrified in case a guppy came near (there were 30 or more), but then we couldn't decide if we should save him or the one panicking in the tetra tank. I said to take both, but then we thought that if we take any then we would be encouraging the shop owner to continue in their cruelty. It was a REALLY tough call. Me myself I would have said sod it and taken the lot, but it ain't my house and there wasn't the tank space available, so there was a perfectly good arguement against it. Besides, this time in a fortnight, the exact same situation would have only been repeated.
Anyway, the whole point of mentioning all this is:
Will the RSPCA/Trading Standards/Animal Welfare Officer do anything if I report the establishment for blatant cruelty? What do you think? Was it the right thing to leave the 2 bettas behind? I was thinking of them see, I know they would have done okay but just couldn't justify it outright. Preventing cruelty is perfectly okay, but encouraging it to be repeated is quite different.....