Question Or Two About My Sick Betta. Any Help Please

kassia

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I have a crown tail betta. ive had him for about a year. I have him in a 1.5 gallon tank with a heater (Temp stays around 80 F) . no filter. i usually do water changes once a week. I recently got lazy about his water changes and now i feel horrible because when i went to do his last change i realized that his tail and top fin look horrible. i also notice what look like bumps on his head? i did a water change and have been using melafix in very small doses. He is still eating and swimming normally. is there anything else i should be doing? I dont want to accidently kill him.
 
Keep doing partial waterchanges everyday for a week and see if he improves. Without a filter you really need to do two changes a week and do not overfeed. I can give you instructions on how to make a very small sponge filter to stick in there with him. In a few weeks it will cycle and then you wont have to waterchange so much and worry about the health of the fish from the ammonia.
PM if youd like instructions.
cheers
 
Keep doing partial waterchanges everyday for a week and see if he improves. Without a filter you really need to do two changes a week and do not overfeed. I can give you instructions on how to make a very small sponge filter to stick in there with him. In a few weeks it will cycle and then you wont have to waterchange so much and worry about the health of the fish from the ammonia.
PM if youd like instructions.
cheers


I would love instructions! thank you! however i cant pm anyone. i read i have to have 30 posts to be able to and i have all of two now i guess.
 
HI
horray for wanting instructions. they are truly fantastic easy filters and do a great job on the cheap.
ive just copied/pasted from an old PM. ignore any info that does not pertain to you/your tank. the build will be the same tho.
ANY questions/clarifications feel free to ask-im a HUGE advocate for these filters for so many reasons.

here's how to make one. it is reallllly simple.

list of things you will need:
- an old fish food tub or any other plastic container with a lid depending on the size of the tank to house it (like an old peanut butter jar (plastic of course), big yogurt container, sour cream container, even an old well rinsed out pill/prescription bottle etc.,).
-something to poke holes in the plastic- a nail and hammer or a drill with a small. sized bit
-gravel or some other material to weight it down
-filter media (sponges work best)
-air pump
-airline tubing


now to build it:
-take the clean container and poke some holes in the bottom. like 8 or so.
-poke a hole in the lid of the container that will accommodate the airtube and be just a BIT wider than the tubing(so the air can get out as it bubbles)
-take an amount of gravel and put it in the bottom (a small handful will be enough)
-put the airline tubing thru the hole in the lid and then run it in the container right down into the gravel
-pack the filter material nice and tight around the airline tubing. you can cut sponges to fit. just make sure its packed well. if not, the airbubbles will have lots of "options" to escape. the idea is to get it so that there is good suction thru the filter as the bubbles rise. if there is lots of airspace in there, the bubbles take the path of least resistance and suction will not be as good thru the media as it should be, and the filter will not work as well.
- put the lid on the container that now is weighted with gravel and packed with media.
-turn on the airpump and viola- nearly instant and cheap filter!!!

some troubleshooting advice:
-if it seems to float, add more gravel to weight it down
-test your water daily and do appropriate waterchanges until it cycles.
-if using mature media, ive found that they usually cycle within a week or so (or sometimes instantly if the bio load is low).
- if you dont notice reduction of ammonia within a week or two, try packing with more media...or if it was REALLY jam packed, maybe take a bit out.


these filters require VERY little maintenance. they are NOT mechanical filters (do not remove the solid waste in the tank) so they dont get all gunked up with waste. i have not touched my filter media in months!!!! although this means that with water changes, you will have to siphon out the solid waste- these filters do not do that for you. they just take care of the chemical filtration (turning ammonia into nitrites into nitrates). they do circulate water quite well tho.

good luck and feel FREE to ask if you need any further instruction or clarification. they Trula are very very simple to make. once you make one, you might not buy a filter ever again. i know i wont smile.gif its a little extra work to clean the solid waste up, but if you regularly do partial water changes anyway, it is not a big deal as you should be siphoning up the poo anyway.

good luck and have fun making your filter!
cheers
 
Thank you very much. I cant wait to try it :D
My betta seems to be doing much better already. i cant wait for his tail to look as healthy as it should.

Thank you again :)
 

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