Alright, before I lose it and go back to keeping rodents instead of fish...
Water parameters still absolutely fine. Nitrites spike sometimes due to my anorectic bala and extra frozen daphnia for that bad boi, but I battle that with water changes, cleaning filter sponges and vacuuming the sand.
I have insulated the tank exactly 7 days ago, added 2nd heater on the other end of the tank (cold room), replaced gravel with sand (AKA removed literally all possible gunk from the tank) and since then maintained very consistent temperature of 30 degrees. Using King British white spot meds every 2 days as per the leaflet, on slightly over half dosage due to loaches.
Most white spots disappeared from the random fish, one loach is still bad but doesn't seem to be getting worse. The spots are taking their time to fall off. No flashing from BNP, nothing from the ram either. Never seen that little dude happier tbf, all proud and very nicely coloured. But what did I notice today?
MY GOURAMIS ON A BLOODY FLASHING CONTEST. Who can flash more in one go without going dizzy seems to be the common theme, 1 bala shark is flashing too. Most seem to specifically target their gills. I tested the water just now (did 50% change yesterday) - ammonia 0, nitrites 0, not sure about nitrates, still waiting for my kit to be delivered as i ran out. Nitrites were between 0 and 0.25 yesterday right before I did WC and on 0 after, tested it twice today, both on 0 as well.
I have 1 more dose left of the king british meds and I am tempted to do WC, run carbon, give it a week and see if fresh water with no meds helps and if not attack this with Esha mix. I was told today in Maidenhead Aquatics where I just randomly asked them how they treat flashing in fish that Esha gdex + exit + 2000 is a great combo and usually treats a wide range of issues but also doesn't have any side effects if used correctly.
Before I do this - does it sound like a reasonable plan?
EDIT: forgot to add that after the 50% WC I did not notice any excessive flashing, the problem really started this evening so solid 24h after the WC
Water parameters still absolutely fine. Nitrites spike sometimes due to my anorectic bala and extra frozen daphnia for that bad boi, but I battle that with water changes, cleaning filter sponges and vacuuming the sand.
I have insulated the tank exactly 7 days ago, added 2nd heater on the other end of the tank (cold room), replaced gravel with sand (AKA removed literally all possible gunk from the tank) and since then maintained very consistent temperature of 30 degrees. Using King British white spot meds every 2 days as per the leaflet, on slightly over half dosage due to loaches.
Most white spots disappeared from the random fish, one loach is still bad but doesn't seem to be getting worse. The spots are taking their time to fall off. No flashing from BNP, nothing from the ram either. Never seen that little dude happier tbf, all proud and very nicely coloured. But what did I notice today?
MY GOURAMIS ON A BLOODY FLASHING CONTEST. Who can flash more in one go without going dizzy seems to be the common theme, 1 bala shark is flashing too. Most seem to specifically target their gills. I tested the water just now (did 50% change yesterday) - ammonia 0, nitrites 0, not sure about nitrates, still waiting for my kit to be delivered as i ran out. Nitrites were between 0 and 0.25 yesterday right before I did WC and on 0 after, tested it twice today, both on 0 as well.
I have 1 more dose left of the king british meds and I am tempted to do WC, run carbon, give it a week and see if fresh water with no meds helps and if not attack this with Esha mix. I was told today in Maidenhead Aquatics where I just randomly asked them how they treat flashing in fish that Esha gdex + exit + 2000 is a great combo and usually treats a wide range of issues but also doesn't have any side effects if used correctly.
Before I do this - does it sound like a reasonable plan?
EDIT: forgot to add that after the 50% WC I did not notice any excessive flashing, the problem really started this evening so solid 24h after the WC
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