My natural style tanks and biotopes thread

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Nice, do you have to hibernate them over winter?
They brumate, not quite hibernate.
They can handle cold well, it's lack of oxygen that can kill them in the winter.
They also need easy access in and out of the pond in early spring. Brumation leaves them a little weak and they can drown in steep sideded ponds.
Depending on species, they are really tough.
 
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I honestly couldn't tell you what kind of betta it is. I haven't kept a betta since I was a kid. I'm not at all up to date with the different names for different lines.

To be honest my 3 year old daughter always wants one everytime she comes along with me to the fish shops. This time a gave in and I brought this one home with us.
I have to admit, despite never considering getting one, I find it mesmerising. Such an elegant and responsive fish.
I have a little 18x12x12 that I'm in the middle of setting up for it. It will be a tempory home until I've created space for a 24 inch cube tank.
I will dedicate the smaller tank to shrimps from there on.
Been years since I've had any, but bettas are underappreciated imo, partly because they're so common, considered to be a beginner fish, as well as the way many people keep them. Besides their curiosity and wet pet qualities, they can be entertaining in a community tank. I've had bettas in many a SA or discus tank, while you're doing a water change or rearranging a tank and everyone else is keeping out of the way, the betta would be right there where I was working, as though curious to see what I was doing and getting a close-up view.
 
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Nature works well when we let it and we work with it. In my old tanks I had terrestrial plants growing out the back. I put them in rubber tubing to allow the roots to survive my silver dollars. Geo's kept the sand fluffed, and with some aqautic plats deep in the drift wood everything balanced. The plants sucked out so many nitrates that I almost never had to change the water. I would test it weekly and always had great numbers.
I say it all the time-- there's no one size fits all formula for water changes and people shouldn't insist on their particular formula as a standard. What you need is affected by the ecology of each tank-- stock levels, type and size of fish, what and how much you feed, local water quality, plants, substrate, filters, redox and water chemistry, etc. You can set things up to require a lot of water changes, not so many, or relatively few.
 
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Been years since I've had any, but bettas are underappreciated imo, partly because they're so common, considered to be a beginner fish, as well as the way many people keep them. Besides their curiosity and wet pet qualities, they can be entertaining in a community tank. I've had bettas in many a SA or discus tank, while you're doing a water change or rearranging a tank and everyone else is keeping out of the way, the betta would be right there where I was working, as though curious to see what I was doing and getting a close-up view.
It's funny but I've been away on the island fuerteventura for the last couple of weeks. When ever I think of my fish and their well being in my absence, my betta keeps popping up in my mind first. Must be testament to how much pluck and personality these fish have.
Certainly glad my daughter persuaded me to get it. Its really grown on me.
You can keep all the rare fancy stuff but there is a reason the common fish have stood the test of time in the hobby.
 
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It's funny but I've been away on the island fuerteventura for the last couple of weeks. When ever I think of my fish and their well being in my absence, my betta keeps popping up in my mind first. Must be testament to how much pluck and personality these fish have.
Certainly glad my daughter persuaded me to get it. Its really grown on me.
You can keep all the rare fancy stuff but there is a reason the common fish have stood the test of time in the hobby.
I have a story about that.

In my early days of fishkeeping, pre-internet, like a lot of newbies I tried some goofy combinations of fish together, unless advised otherwise by someone at the lfs. I once had a dark blue betta I named Rambo because:

He was one of the only fish that survived a tank crash when the local water treatment plant messed something up and it killed most of my fish within hours after a water change. On another occasion I had a jewel fish in the same tank, which was okay until he decided he didn't like this betta and roughed him up pretty good. The betta then proceeded to continually follow and flare at the (larger) jewel fish day after day until he hounded the jewel fish into submission and the jewel was afraid of him ever after. On another occasion-- same betta-- I'd gotten a baby arowana, which was okay until the arowana got about 6 inches and decided the betta could be dinner. Betta escaped, but with no fins at all. For a while he swam and got along by wiggling his body to get around. I put the aro in a different tank, the betta's fins eventually grew back, and other than the fins being a little different color he eventually looked just the same as before.

Loved that little guy. :ROFL:
 
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