New here, fish pellets questions. 😀

FishForums.net Pet of the Month
🐶 The Poll is Open! 🦎 Click here to Vote! 🐰

Weimargirl01

New Member
Joined
Dec 24, 2021
Messages
19
Reaction score
9
Location
Spokane, Wa
Hello all,

I'm new here on the forum, I've had fish about 20 years ago and just recently started up a small tank with a few neons and a betta. All is well and everyone gets along great. My question is fish pellets. I soak my pellets so they are easier to digest but when I add the water/pellets back to the tank, the pellets sink and the betta misses out on dinner. I'm very careful about the food on the substrate because we all know the consequences. How is the best way to feed these pellets so they stay floating for him? I feed the neons opposite side of tank so they get their food, and of course the pellets sink to the bottom too. 🙄

Help please, and thank you! 😊
 

otterblue

Fish Crazy
Joined
Oct 9, 2021
Messages
206
Reaction score
277
Location
Columbus, Ohio
Hi. Welcome. Maybe soak it a little less so that it's still buoyant and turn off your filter while feeding.

EDIT: Hours later, I realized I misspelled "buoyant". This may still be wrong, but it's closer.
 
Last edited:

FishHobby99

Fish Gatherer
Joined
Aug 15, 2021
Messages
2,469
Reaction score
72
Location
USA
I use Betta micro floating betta pellet food. The secondhand betta setup I purchased came with them. I called the pellet manufacturer & asked about an expiration date. Mine were out of the original packaging. He said 3 years. But the vial rolled onto the floor & Rocky, a Frenchie, chewed into the plastic & gobbled them down like bacon bits. So I ordered more online. Expiration date is 9/28/24.
B4857938-6628-4BDE-96FF-8229421FDA09.jpeg
 

Byron

Supporting Member
Tank of the Month!
Joined
Feb 25, 2009
Messages
20,000
Reaction score
11,885
Location
CA
Other members can correct me if I am wrong here, but I believe the mini pellets do not need soaking. They are intended to float, though in time they obviously will sink. Flake food is the same, no need to soak.

The food that is an issue for soaking is anything freeze dried. The reason is that the fish eats the "dry" food and it expands in the fish's stomach/intestines (whichever), and this is serious. I have been advised that this is not an issue with flake/pellets. Which is why I never feed freeze-dried foods, not even with soaking. There are very nutritious flake/pellet foods available today that are better.
 

FishHobby99

Fish Gatherer
Joined
Aug 15, 2021
Messages
2,469
Reaction score
72
Location
USA
I have never soaked them. They are hard, but he eats some immediately. The instructions don‘t say anything about soaking. They say the pellets are very concentrated & to feed sparingly 2X a day, what he can eat in 5 minutes.

Someone here said not to put flakes on the water surface, to stick your hand below the waterline or else the fish will get all bloated from air. Sounds like balderdash! My goldfish, guppies, cichlids & catfish eat surface flakes. Some other stuff too, but flakes everyday.
 

Sgooosh

Fish Connoisseur
Tank of the Month!
2x Fish of the Month!
Joined
Dec 3, 2020
Messages
6,686
Reaction score
3,004
Location
United States
my guppies, gouramis, cories, and swordails all love hikari micro pellets which are similar to above and also hikari fancy guppy
also soaking flakes can also help because the flakes glide down to the bottom slowly
 
OP
OP
W

Weimargirl01

New Member
Joined
Dec 24, 2021
Messages
19
Reaction score
9
Location
Spokane, Wa
Other members can correct me if I am wrong here, but I believe the mini pellets do not need soaking. They are intended to float, though in time they obviously will sink. Flake food is the same, no need to soak.

The food that is an issue for soaking is anything freeze dried. The reason is that the fish eats the "dry" food and it expands in the fish's stomach/intestines (whichever), and this is serious. I have been advised that this is not an issue with flake/pellets. Which is why I never feed freeze-dried foods, not even with soaking. There are very nutritious flake/pellet foods available today that are better.
Ok, thanks
 
OP
OP
W

Weimargirl01

New Member
Joined
Dec 24, 2021
Messages
19
Reaction score
9
Location
Spokane, Wa
I have never soaked them. They are hard, but he eats some immediately. The instructions don‘t say anything about soaking. They say the pellets are very concentrated & to feed sparingly 2X a day, what he can eat in 5 minutes.

Someone here said not to put flakes on the water surface, to stick your hand below the waterline or else the fish will get all bloated from air. Sounds like balderdash! My goldfish, guppies, cichlids & catfish eat surface flakes. Some other stuff too, but flakes everyday.
I read somewhere on the net about soaking them, but your right, it doesn't say they need to soaked before ingesting. Obviously I've been making this way harder on myself. 😆
 
OP
OP
W

Weimargirl01

New Member
Joined
Dec 24, 2021
Messages
19
Reaction score
9
Location
Spokane, Wa
my guppies, gouramis, cories, and swordails all love hikari micro pellets which are similar to above and also hikari fancy guppy
also soaking flakes can also help because the flakes glide down to the bottom slowly
Great, thanks! 😁
 

Colin_T

Fish Guru
Joined
Jan 26, 2008
Messages
36,309
Reaction score
20,791
Location
Perth, WA
Soaking pellets helps get the air out of the pellet and softens the pellet up a bit. This makes it feel a little more natural to the fish.

When the pellets have been soaked for a bit, they swell up and this means a fish is eating the full size pellet and not something that will expand in its stomach. If a fish eats a lot of dry pellets, they can absorb water in the fish's stomach and the pellets swell up. If the fish ate a lot of pellets and they expand, it can cause some intestinal discomfort to the fish.
 

Most reactions

trending

Top