Due to an ice storm our power went out around 6pm on Wed, 22 Feb. My tanks were due for their weekly water change on Thurs, the very next day. I checked parameters Wed afternoon and the only tank with nitrates at that time was the one in my basement at 10pm. I figured I would be taking care of that one the next day…..and then we lost power a few hours later.
Our house dropped 10 degrees the first night and we woke to temps in the mid-50s. Tank temps were in the low 60s. Some tanks were so low the readings were not determined using the stick-on-glass temp readings. I knew my shrimp tank would be fine. I was most concerned with my cichlid/loach/SAE/neon tank, and my tetra/glass cat/SAE/cory tank.
By Thurs afternoon we were searching for a generator as the power restoration ETA was by end of the day Sunday. We just happened to be at the right store at the right time to grab a generator being unloaded from a truck coming from a store further to our north. Still, there was time involved getting it hooked up and getting the power restored to our furnace (first goal) and then to our tropical parrot building on the property (temps in there were in the 30s by Thursday night). Our house had temps in the 40s.
My angelfish was upside down resting on the substrate. He wasn’t flat on the substrate, but in a vertical position, only upside down. The neons were swimming around, seemingly doing ok. I really couldn’t see what was going on in the basement tank and I wasn’t going to shine a flashlight in there. The poor fish down there were dealing with enough already, in my opinion.
I didn’t feed any of them while the power was out, and while the tanks slowly warmed back up on Friday I left them alone. Come Saturday morning, tanks near normal temps and the house nice and warm again, I gave them some flake. I need to get some fresh frozen meaty fish foods from the pet store today.
I am sharing this info to help others who may be faced with a power outage in the dead of winter and who may worry about their fish.
So far, so good. Nobody has died. Everyone seems fine. If that changes in the next 30 days I will update here to let it be known.
Our house dropped 10 degrees the first night and we woke to temps in the mid-50s. Tank temps were in the low 60s. Some tanks were so low the readings were not determined using the stick-on-glass temp readings. I knew my shrimp tank would be fine. I was most concerned with my cichlid/loach/SAE/neon tank, and my tetra/glass cat/SAE/cory tank.
By Thurs afternoon we were searching for a generator as the power restoration ETA was by end of the day Sunday. We just happened to be at the right store at the right time to grab a generator being unloaded from a truck coming from a store further to our north. Still, there was time involved getting it hooked up and getting the power restored to our furnace (first goal) and then to our tropical parrot building on the property (temps in there were in the 30s by Thursday night). Our house had temps in the 40s.
My angelfish was upside down resting on the substrate. He wasn’t flat on the substrate, but in a vertical position, only upside down. The neons were swimming around, seemingly doing ok. I really couldn’t see what was going on in the basement tank and I wasn’t going to shine a flashlight in there. The poor fish down there were dealing with enough already, in my opinion.
I didn’t feed any of them while the power was out, and while the tanks slowly warmed back up on Friday I left them alone. Come Saturday morning, tanks near normal temps and the house nice and warm again, I gave them some flake. I need to get some fresh frozen meaty fish foods from the pet store today.
I am sharing this info to help others who may be faced with a power outage in the dead of winter and who may worry about their fish.
So far, so good. Nobody has died. Everyone seems fine. If that changes in the next 30 days I will update here to let it be known.