Hikari Betta Bio~gold

AmberC

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I started using this a few weeks ago and boy is it a great food! My bettas SCARF it!!! PLUS it keeps their 1 gallons MUCH cleaner than anything else I feed them!!! (2 different kinds of Flakes, cichlid granules, bloodworms, peas.. for a varied diet :D )

Yea so it gets :thumbs: from me!!!
 
Yeah its definitely the only 'pellet' type food that mine like. :D But *I* like it too (for reasons stated above) lol
 
Same here! All my bettas like it except for one, but he's crazy anyways... He only likes flakes... :dunno:

-- Leigh Ann
 
i actually have some bettas that won't touch hikari betta bio gold for some reason :lol: they would rather eat the inferior hbc betta pellets (which i suppose is a good thing as they are cheaper). some of my more picky eaters are really loving the daphnia culture i've got going right now though, the daphnia don't even have a chance to swim around, they are "gone in 60 seconds" or less ;)
 
Both of mine will wolf down bio-gold pellets or any other pellet I feed them. They get bio-gold, betta bites, bio blend betta pellets, tetra mini granules, bloodworms, and brine shrimp. One of my bettas can get picky about the brine shrimp (sometimes he'll eat it, other times he won't :huh: ) other than that the only food they've ever rejected was veggies :lol:
 
shrks1fan said:
BKK, where/how did you get your Daphnia culture started? I've been wanting to do that myself as it's a great food for Juvis.

Linda
http://www.pet-emporium.com/files
http://www.cooking-fanatics.com/files
i'm totally impressed with how easy daphnia are to raise. last time i was visiting marianne at bcbetta.com she gave me a starter culture along with a bottle of green water to get things started. she also gave a great tip on an alternate to using green water; a sprinkle of sugar, a sprinkle of dried condensed milk and a sprinkle of bakers yeast. grind it all up together and mix with water, instant food. the only precaution is to not overfeed them. we keep a plastic basin on the window sill and feed a bit every couple of days, they reproduce like crazy, you can use a turkey baster or course net to harvest them. not only are they plentiful but they look cool too ;)
 

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