Thanks
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Mollies,painted glass tetras(a horrible dye-injected pet industry
shame),etc.,are tropicals that would perish unless you lived in a
warm year round climate.Comets,shubunkins,fantails,etc.,are hardy
and colorful,and a pond your size can house several koi.Feeder
goldfish can harbor disease or parasites and should be
quarantined or avoided.
There are no such thing as starter fish.
They will move in, put down money on a nice corner
of the pond, set about redecorating, have children, collect
food coupons, collect social security, break the
Medicare bank when they get sick (reference
posts about Goldy's fins rotting off).
If they get murdered by a heron, snake, bullfrog or
kingfisher you will become prosecuting attorney,
judge and jury in punishing the evil doer.
Starter fish _never_ leave the pond.
It is all part of the plan.
Since you already have a pond it is
to late for you.
The only thing you can
do is corrupt a neighbor into building a pond
and then you can
pass the starter fishes' children on to them.
k30a and the water gardening labradors
see the labradors at
http://www.daydreamergardens.com/2_level/articles/dog_how_to.htm
K30A and friends' pond information page
http://hometown.aol.com/k30a/myhomepage/writing.html
My very favorite flowering pond plant is a floater called Water Hyacinth. If
you live in the south you won't be able to find it in a store, but if you live
where you have winter freezes you should always get some each spring. It is a
good filter plant and it has neat looking bulbous leaves and pretty violet
flowers. You *must* get some water lilies. They are standard fare for the
water garden, and quite beautiful. The hardy ones come with blooms in shades of
pink/red, yellow and white and the tropical ones also come in blues and
violets. There are even night blooming tropicals. Day blooming lily blooms
only open from about 10 in the morning until 4 or 5 in the evening, then they
close up overnight. Each hardy flower opens for three days. If you work days
you might prefer a night blooming lily that would be open while you are there.
They open in the evening hours.
pgoolsby wrote:
> Hi Everyone I need help, I have just done my first pond I am really
> excited about it and am ready to add fish and flowers now.
> Can someone recommend a good fish type to start with and blooming
> flowers.
> My pond is about 10 by 12 feet 2 1/2 feet deep.
> I know it is kind of large for a starter pond but I have faith, I am
> really excited about it and cant wait to be able to sit back relaxe and
> watch the fish.
> Wal-Mart here in town has common gold fish very cheap like 20cents a
> piece can I start with these are should I leave those for feeder fish.
> I would like to know some other types of fish also, I hear that the
> black mollies are good and what about the painted glass tetra? Please
> any and all comments are appreciated.
>
> Thanks
>
> * Sent from RemarQ http://www.remarq.com The Internet's Discussion Network *
> The fastest and easiest way to search and participate in Usenet - Free!
--
Kellie
Final Portrait * A Novel by Kellie Sisson Snider
Kass Arts Publicity <http://kassarts.bizland.com>
Thanks for your fast response, I do have a pump and filter in and
running, I live in South (Mississippi) and the weather here has been
unusally hot already this year, the water is luke warm already it has
only been a couple of days since everything has been set up and ready
so you do suggest I wait another week or so to add the Fish?????
I really was ready to get it going but I don't want to do it to fast.
Thanks for your comment
Now, there are some DOs also- Do have fun!!! (I say all the don'ts to try to
save you some hassles.)
> ... it has
> only been a couple of days since everything has been set up and ready
> so you do suggest I wait another week or so to add the Fish?????
> I really was ready to get it going but I don't want to do it to fast.
> Thanks for your comment
--
pgoolsby wrote in message <0f553ea2...@usw-ex0106-044.remarq.com>...
>Hi Everyone I need help, I have just done my first pond I am really
>excited about it and am ready to add fish and flowers now.
>Can someone recommend a good fish type to start with and blooming
>flowers.
>My pond is about 10 by 12 feet 2 1/2 feet deep.
>I know it is kind of large for a starter pond but I have faith, I am
>really excited about it and cant wait to be able to sit back relaxe and
>watch the fish.
>Wal-Mart here in town has common gold fish very cheap like 20cents a
>piece can I start with these are should I leave those for feeder fish.
>I would like to know some other types of fish also, I hear that the
>black mollies are good and what about the painted glass tetra? Please
>any and all comments are appreciated.
>
>Thanks
>
>
pgoolsby <pgoolsby...@olemiss.edu.invalid> wrote:
I have just done my first pond
>Wal-Mart here in town has common gold fish very cheap
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
dr....@megapathdsl.net in the Frozen Tundra zone 5 sorta
List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List
for care of goldfish go to http://puregold.aquaria.net/
Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> A fantail is very much like a pug dog or a Persian cat. Comets are
>more like a greyhound or abyssinian. A koi is - hmmm I guess I think of
>them somewhere in the middle. Maybe like a Mainecoon or a basset hound. DK
My butterfly koi must be silky terriers. ;o)
As far as waiting and wanting to add now, you CAN buy the fish, just
quarantine them in an aquarium (or rubbermaid container with air pump run
corner filters). This way you'll know they're healthy, if you immediately
turn them loose in the pond and they die you're going to wonder "Is
something toxic in my pond?" When it was the fish that was sick and the
stress of moving killed it. Just a thought. ~ jan