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Tuesday, August 13, 2013

How to Feed Your Tropical Fish

Feed your fish twice a day with floating food. I recommend you feed your fish products such as the ones listed above. Start by feeding your fish a very small pinch of food. Carefully watch them eat. If they eat it all quickly, then give them another small pinch. Feeding your fish slowly in small amounts will give you a chance to watch them and make sure they are all eating.

Keep giving them small pinches as long as they eat all of it quickly. Feed them as much as they'll eat without leaving any uneaten food.

Food that sinks to the bottom and is not eaten will cause water pollution, so be sure all the food is eaten. Use your net to remove the food that is not eaten after ten minutes. It's fun to feed smaller fish a few of Freeze Dried Blood Worms for dessert.

Other Foods. It's good for most fish to eat some frozen or live brine shrimp and a few live Black Worms. We try to alternate feeding live or frozen brine shrimp with Live Black Worms. One day most fish get brine shrimp, and the next day they get Live Black Worms. Click here to read more about Live Black Worms.

Do Your Fish Need to Eat Everyday? No they don't, but don't abuse them! Most fish that you can buy from this web site or elsewhere are very young, and like all young animals, they need food at least twice a day, every day. Make a commitment to take the time to feed your fish carefully twice every day.

What Foods to Feed Your Fish

Most small fish living in fish bowls will do well on a diet of flake food and freeze dried blood worms, which are actually mosquito larvae. How to Start a Fish Bowl.
When you choose a fish bowl, pick a big one: at least one-gallon. You'll also need a small 3" wide fish net, two 1-gallon bottles of drinking water not distilled or de-ionized water, and some floating fish food. Together floating fish food that is labeled for your type of fish plus some freeze dried blood worms, which are actually mosquito larvae, make an excellent diet for the fish in your fish bowl. Don't buy or use fish food that sinks.

Water from the Tap Isn't Safe for Fish

Even if you treat the tap water straight from the faucet with water condition it still won't be safe for fish in fish bowls. Bottled drinking water is safe for fish in fish bowls.
Fill the fish bowl 2" from the top with the bottled drinking water, not bottled distilled or de-ionized water, and then cover your fish bowl with a clean plastic cover from a can of coffee so the fish won't jump out.

Your Fish need fresh water. Your fish can't live forever in the same old water. Twice a week replace 20% of the water in your fish bowl with bottled drinking water.

indah

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