Friday, February 21, 2014

5 Months Later

The babies are 5 months old now, and I expect they will all be in their new homes within the next week! I have many people here in Kodiak anxiously awaiting their new family members :)

I have just returned from a 3 week vacation to Florida. Fortunately, I had a very trustworthy house sitter while away, so the babies did okay while I was gone. I actually took 3 fish with me all the way to Florida! One nice thing about betta fish is that they are really great travelers! They made it through security and didn't have a single issue for the 21 hours of planes and airports. I took Neptune and 2 babies with me; one Mustard Gas like his daddy and one multi-colored female. Neptune is now living with my brother, and actually has some tank mates! A couple of tetras and a dojo loach, and he's getting along splendidly with them! I'm so proud. The female is living in a 30 gallon tank in my mother-in-law's classroom with a pleco, a crayfish, and 2 minnows. From what I have been told, she likes hanging out in the hollow log with the crayfish. The MG male is with my friend Lisa, with a space all to himself. I'm told he's very curious!

I came home to what seemed like completely different fish! The only one I still recognized was the blue-green female that I am planning to breed to Casper. And there was one very big surprise waiting for me; I have 3 marbled bettas! I was NOT expecting that AT ALL! They are piebald marbles, meaning their heads are "bald" flesh colored, and their bodies have spots or "marbling". 2 are males and 1 is a female (as far as I can tell!). The female is cute because she appears to have a mustache. One of the males reminds me of a panda, because he is black and "white", but the white is actually the "bald" coloring. The other male is my favorite, maybe of all of the fry; he has the piebald head and a few bald spots on his body, but is mostly black with black and blue fins that end in almost a butterfly effect (cellophane or clear coloring on the edges). BUT he also has yellow spots in his fins! He will be living in Neptune's old tank until I decide whether or not I will keep him.

Now that this batch of fry are all grown up and "leaving the nest" it's time for me to start thinking about my next breeding! Once I saw my marbled fish, I really wanted to breed him! But I still want to breed Casper to the blue-green female because they should produce some nice blue colors, and of course everyone loves the blue bettas! So now I am thinking about breeding 2 more pairs 1-2 months apart. It will be a lot more to keep up with, so it's something I will really have to think about. I will also need a 20 gallon grow out tank. Lack of a decent sized grow out tank was the biggest problem I had with this batch of fry. Hopefully I can find one locally that isn't already inhabited! If I do breed the marbled one, I think I would breed him to Neptune's sister, Esmeralda, to maximize my chances of getting more marbled coloring. From that pairing, I would expect mustard gas and marble coloring.

And now, the pics! Enjoy!

Blue-Green Female aka "Casper's Girlfriend". Her color is a little washed here

Marbled Male #1 aka "Sir Awesome Fins", flaring at his brother 

Sir Awesome Fins again; better view of his awesome fins

Blue Male

same blue male, but better lighting and he's flaring here

Marbled Female, aka "Mustache Fish"

Marbled Male #2 aka "Panda Fish"

Mustard Gas Female. She looks like her Aunt Esmeralda when she's fully colored

Mustard Gas Male who now lives in Florida! Photo courtesy of my friend Lisa:) 

Friday, January 17, 2014

Growing Up/Going Home

The fry are now 3 months old. By this point I was expecting to be overwhelmed with fully grown fry trying to bite each other's tails off, but most of them are still rather small. And determining gender is turning out to be a real challenge! I was convinced that a few of the babies (Gem, for example) were female, but turned out being males!

Gem went to his new home last weekend, and Froning went home almost 2 weeks ago. So far they are the only babies who have left the "nest", but I'm hoping to rehome a few more of the largest ones before the end of the month!

Now for the depressing part of betta breeding...I did have to cull some of the fry. *sigh*. I felt like such a terrible person, but it's just a harsh reality of breeding. You end up with a large number of fry and there will inevitably be ones with deformities. I had about a dozen with either severe spinal deformities, or swim bladder issues that prevented them from swimming properly. I have some other fry that are missing, or have very small ventral fins, but they are getting along just fine so I am leaving them be. I was hoping I wouldn't have to cull any, but when it came down to it I realized I just didn't have the space to continue housing them all. I have two 10 gallon tanks I'm raising them in, which is less than ideal, but I couldn't get my hands on anything larger in this small island. And if I'm being completely honest, I was hoping that a couple of 10 gallons would suffice, but next time around I would definitely make sure to have a larger grow out tank. I also think it would have prevented some of the deformities I ended up with.

Here's what some of them are looking like now:

"Froning" adjusting to his new environment

"Tail Dipper" Displaying deep blues with dark red wash (definitely a male)

"Gem" before his true colors (deep blue) came out

I think this is a female...not sure yet! Looks a lot like mommy though

Another shot of the handsome "Froning", compliments of his new owner