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Thank-you. I've never used it so I did a quick explore - I think that it's a good food, but I would treat it more like a frozen food and feed it 2 (or 3 times at the most) a week and select another [dry] food as the staple. But then you can experiment to see what works best for you, your fish, and your wallet.I think it is very nice!
I started out with Tetra food because I didn't know any better, but am hoping to switch over to UltraFresh. Would you recommend it even though it wasn't listed in your article?
Although you could feed BBS spirulina, they are most nutritious when fed within 24 hours of hatching before the egg sack is consumed. Feeding BBS spirulina is not really 'gut loading' and is most often done to grow out the shrimp. Like 'sea monkeys' you can grow out bbs into adult brine shrimp (but I never found it very practical).you know anything about feeding spirulina or other things to BBS to increase the nutritional value ? And what's this about them molting and instar sizes ?
I'm not a fan of Wardley foods. Unless they've changed considerably, their foods listed grain as the 1st ingredient and although it may appear to be high in protein, fish just don't process grain well.Not a big user of flakes anymore but when I did the one my fish liked best was Wardleys.
You might consider Grindal worm's big brother, white worms as they are about twice the size. I culture a warm temperature variety (although they're best at about 60F) and find they are very prolific, although Grindal worms will tolerate much higher temps.I feed BBS , Grindal worms and fruit flies . I only have eight tanks so that's manageable.
The article was informative. Surprised you aren't hearing more from folks. This is the one subject that should make a 1,000 post thread.One last bump in the hopes of getting more feedback.
What do you feed your fish and what do you think about the article. Thank you.