coriesinhawaii
Fish Crazy
AgreeI got my first fish when I was 9 or 10 years old. It was a scraggy little goldfish that my dad won at the fair. We put it into a goldfish bowl (yes that is what the box said in the early 70's..so who were we to argue). Water straight from the tap, no substrate, no filter...just one scraggy little sausage in a bowl.
That fish lived for almost 20 years. Grew a tad quickly so dad and I got it bigger homes at a regular basis. In the end dad gave in with my pleading and dug a pond in the garden. That scraggy little thing of no more than a couple of inches lived to old age and close to 2ft long without any fancy pantsy filters or water treatments etc.
Sometimes I wish things could return to that simple way of fishkeeping....but then the multibillion fish additive industry would go bust.
I am old school. My fish have no water treatments, basic filtration, no heating in the summer months (the filter's powerhead manages to warm the water perfectly well on its own)
I think there is too much dependence on additives and medications and those who are new to the game of keeping fish thesedays are literally blinded by science and the person at the till in the shop.
There is absolutely no need to throw the entire chemist shop at your fish at the slightest sneeze.
Clean, fresh water is natures best medicine.
The most frustrating thing I have seen happen to newbies to the game are that they are recommended certain fish...like Betta...told how easy peasy they are when they are so genetically messed up they are prone to all sorts of illness and disease that the Betta I had 40+ years ago came in two colours red or blue and lived to a ripe old age without so much as a sniffle.
I understand the frustrations of newbies who feel attacked when they buy their first fish and everything goes pearshaped. We have to remember that 90% of these lovely people have only done what they were told to do at the shop. We as "experienced" fishy keepers know the differences and how to treat most ailments, much of what we know has come from trial and error and bad advice.
Fishkeeping is NOT easy. It can be hard graft, it can be expensive and when things go wrong it can be devastating. But at the same time it can also be one of the most rewarding pastimes you will ever experience.
So on the frustration side of things, I hate it when someone new to the game has done as they were told at the shop both in species type, aquarium size and care and its all gone horribly wrong, they come to forums like this and ask for help only to be shot down in flames and made to feel like they are the world's worst fishkeeper.
We were all first timers once, we have all made errors....back when I had that scraggy little goldfish, life was simple. It isn't anymore, its a minefield filled with good intentions, bad advice, inbred/overbred fish that die too soon and too easily and chemicals.
That, to me at least, is not just frustrating...its sad.
Am I correct in assuming it’s a double-edged sword? That there’s many more species available now at the LFS than there were decades ago but the fish are often more sickly due to poor breeding practices and the stress of shipping halfway across the world?