WHAT JOBS ARE WE DOING IN THE GARDEN TODAY - 2017

Discussion in 'General Gardening Discussion' started by ARMANDII, Jan 9, 2017.

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  1. ARMANDII

    ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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    "When cultivating an aquarium, you are likely to run into a variety of freshwater aquarium fish diseases and conditions including dropsy. Learn how to treat and prevent these diseases so you can better protect your fish.
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    When it comes to keeping your aquarium fish healthy there are many aquarium fish diseases you need to be on guard against. It is not uncommon for new aquarium owners to be caught off guard by conditions like dropsy because they can pop up unexpectedly. Before you can treat your fish for dropsy, you must first learn what it is and what causes it. Often incorrectly referred to as a disease, dropsy is actually an internal bacterial infection that causes the bodies of aquarium fish to swell. Though dropsy in itself is not typically contagious, the conditions which lead to the contraction of dropsy can have negative effects on other fish in the tank if not remedied quickly. In this article you will learn the basics about what dropsy is, how it can be treated, and how to prevent it in the first place.

    Symptoms of Dropsy in Fish

    Dropsy is a condition that commonly affects goldfish and other freshwater aquarium fish -- the symptoms of this condition are fairly easy to recognize because they involve the swelling of the belly or, in some cases the whole body, of the fish. In addition to swelling, some of your fish's scales may begin to protrude from its body almost to the point where it looks like they might pop off. Fish that have dropsy are also likely to experience behavioral changes, becoming lethargic, hovering near the top of bottom of the aquarium rather than swimming around – affected fish may also lose their appetite. Some fish may even have sunken eyes or their eyes may begin to swell and bulge.

    Causes of Dropsy

    In most cases, dropsy is the result of a bacterial infection caused by bacteria Aeromonas. Aeromonas is a bacteria that is commonly found in most fish tanks but it is only like to infect fish that are stressed due to overcrowding or poor water quality. Dropsy can also affect fish that have poor kidney function, a condition which may result in the absorption of water into the body cavity which causes the stomach of the fish to swell. Although dropsy is not usually contagious, it is a good idea to isolate any sick fish from those that are healthy so you can treat the ill fish before returning them to the community tank.

    Treatment Methods

    If you suspect that one or more of your aquarium fish are suffering from dropsy, follow these steps to treat the condition:

    1. Isolate the sick fish in a hospital tank. To make water changes easier, this tank should be kept bare except for a filter and heater, if necessary. The temperature of the hospital tank should be as close to that of the original tank as possible.

    2. Create a salt bath by adding no more than 2.5 teaspoons of Epsom salt for every ten gallons of water in the hospital tank. The magnesium sulfate in the Epsom salts may help to draw the excess water out of the fish's body that caused it to swell.

    3. Feed your fish antibacterial fish food. You can either purchase prepared antibacterial fish food or make your own by creating a 1% mixture of fish food and an antibiotic like chloromycetin or tetracycline.

    4. Continue to feed your fish antibiotic fish food and monitor their progress for 7 to 10 days.

    5. If no improvement is seen after several days of treatment, treat the aquarium water with Maracyn Two. This medication is effective against bacterial infections and is absorbed through the skin of fish.

    6. If, after ten days of treatment, your fish shows no signs of improvement or if it becomes worse it may be that the cause of dropsy is not bacterial. If the antibiotics do not work and the salt bath is ineffective, there may be nothing else you can do for your fish.

    To find out about other treatments for dropsy you can contact your local pet store and seek advice from the professionals there but dropsy is a notoriously difficult disease to cure and other treatments may be just as ineffective.

    How to Prevent Dropsy

    As is true of most tropical fish diseases, the best way to prevent dropsy is to maintain good water quality in your tank by staying on top of routine maintenance tasks. Perform routine weekly water changes in your fish tank; changing out between 10% and 20% of your aquarium's water volume. You should also perform a larger water change of 25% the tank volume once a month. It is also important to give your fish enough space in the aquarium - overcrowding can result in stress and illness. Avoid feeding your fish too much as well because uneaten fish food that sinks to the bottom of the tank will decompose and it may negatively affect water quality in the tank.

    Stress in Fish

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    As you have already learned, stress is a key factor in the development of dropsy in fish. Unfortunately, your fish cannot communicate with you to let you know that something in the tank is causing them stress – it is up to you to learn and identify not only the potential causes of stress for your fish but also the behaviors they may exhibit as a reaction to that stress. Because stress plays a major role in whether or not your fish become sick when they are exposed to a pathogen, it is essential that you learn everything you can about it.

    Below you will find a list of some of the most common factors contributing to stress in aquarium fish:

    • Sudden changes in water parameters (temperature, pH, water hardness, etc.)
    • Wrong conditions for a certain kind of fish (ex: keeping brackish fish in freshwater)
    • Bullying from other tank mates (fin nipping, for example)
    • Injuries related to bullying from other fish
    • Presence of disease or parasites in the tank
    • Poor quality of diet or not enough food

    Below you will find a list of common symptoms of stress in fish:

    • Lethargy or lolling at the bottom of the tank
    • Loss of appetite
    • Changes in appearance (color, growths, redness, inflammation)
    • Flashing behavior
    • Clamped fins
    • Gasping at the tank surface

    Using the information provided above about risk factors for stress and the symptoms of stress in fish, you should have a better idea how to keep your freshwater fish healthy. It is not always easy to diagnose the symptoms of disease in fish, but if your fish become stressed it will be fairly obvious. As soon as you suspect that your fish are becoming stressed you need to do whatever it takes to remedy the situation before they get sick. Avoiding stress in the freshwater tank is the key to preventing many aquarium fish diseases including dropsy.

    Unfortunately, dropsy is a condition which is often fatal in fish and it can be caused by many different things. The key to preventing dropsy is to keep your aquarium clean and as stress-free for your fish as possible. If your fish should happen to contract dropsy, take action as soon as possible to treat the disease. Even if you act quickly, however, there may be nothing you can do to save your fish. The best thing you can do is keep your tank clean in the hopes of preventing your fish from becoming sick at all."
     
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    • Verdun

      Verdun Passionate gardener

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      Good morning everyone :)
      Wet here and windy so prob wont even venture out there today. Could be some sun later in the day though :noidea:
       
    • luciusmaximus

      luciusmaximus Total Gardener

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      Had a wander around the garden yesterday and looked at how much its got away from me again. For various reason just not had the time to be out there battling with it. It never takes long for nature to reclaim my efforts. Looked at the piles of rubbish. Earlier in the day I opened the porch door to find young Blackbird chick in a heap on the doorstep. Maybe it hit the door as it was windy. Picked it up but it died in my hands before I could attempt to help it :cry3:. Later ( whilst wandering ) I found a pile of what looked like Sparrow feathers :cry3: - that horrid black cat from down the lane no doubt. Decided to sit on patio and read for a bit before making a start on garden. Gust of wind broke the parasol :gaah: Suppose I should have known better to use it when windy but didn't seem to bad. Went to get battery strimmer and found battery hadn't been charged, so reached over to get electric strimmer and knocked over large box of blood and bonemeal and a pot of compost next to it. Scraped my arm against the pebble dashed wall of house whilst pushing past Hydrangea that's overhanging the path. Gave up in disgust and went indoors to sulk:th scifD36:.
       
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      • alana

        alana Super Gardener

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        I've had starts to the day like that too.:sad:

        My walkabout after the heavy rain:bolt: wasn't as bad as yours.
        I'm disappointed with my white rosebud pelegoniums which were quite pricey but they don't tolerate rain and look very sorry for themselves. A few of the taller plants are falling over - I resolve to stake better next season.

        Everything else is lush and no major casualties and on the upside I won't have to water today
         
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        • Verdun

          Verdun Passionate gardener

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          Luciousmaximus, yep, we all get days like that. Have a cup of coffee with your "sulk" and put it behind you. Your day will get better :)
           
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          • "M"

            "M" Total Gardener

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            Sown more leaf lettuce and two different types of radish.

            Spotted yet more oxalis and yanked that out. Chopped down most of the Chilean Potato plant - its a monster! Going to have to rethink that one. Now the hens are scrapping through it just in case there may be a hidden morsel in there :heehee:

            I call that: "taking the hint" ;) Nature was definitely against you today :grphg: Good news being, you've had your bad day now, so its behind you. Tomorrow is another day.
             
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            • Verdun

              Verdun Passionate gardener

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              Been very, very busy....thought about pruning apple and pear trees, thought about picking beans and planting out more lettuce but I need to think how wet I might get. And lots and lots of non garden tasks to think about too.
              Oooo, my brain hurts thinking so much.....lunch too! Wot do I have? Never ending :heehee:
               
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              • luciusmaximus

                luciusmaximus Total Gardener

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                Nothing done again again today :gaah:. But did notice ( whilst stood in rain this morning guarding bowl of bird food from the Starlings ) that we have a Mole :). Been very busy tunnelling from under the shed and has reached one of the buns runs. I haven't seen any activity for awhile.
                 
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                • shiney

                  shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                  I didn't do anything in the garden yesterday (I lie! I was working on a drain cover) but Michael was in to do the heavy work.

                  He strimmed the wild area ready for me to mow, cut back (heavily) some of our 15ft high Philadelphus bushes and some of our 10ft high Euonymous that had grown like mad and were getting out of hand.

                  I'm not sure what else he did as I had to go out but he was working most of the day - until Mrs Shiney sent him home at 4 p.m. because he was looking like a drowned rat! He never brings waterproofs! :doh:

                  As we've been away I reckon I now have about 6 hours of mowing to do :phew: because of the length of the grass. The mowing isn't too difficult but the barrowing of the clippings all the way to the compost heaps is not much fun. Nowadays I'm limited to one tank of fuel in the mower before I have to have an hour's rest. Otherwise I have trouble with my back. I normally feel fine but it's the next day that tells me when I've overdone it. :old: :dunno:

                  I'm not sure that it's dry enough to mow out there as it's long grass and there was heavy rain yesterday. So I may just stick to picking the crops. Someone has just ordered 20lb of golden plums so I had better get the ladder out. As long as I leave enough for the wasps they usually don't bother me.
                   
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                  • Verdun

                    Verdun Passionate gardener

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                    Got a plant delivery today....always exciting! :)
                    I think it will be a good day today....sun already out....so hope to get out in the garden. Still a few wallflowers to plant out (it is amazing how quickly they grow when turfed out of their pots and planted in the ground; by the end of September they will be transplanted to their final positions) runner beans to pick...toms too.
                    Hope you all have a good day :smile:
                     
                  • alana

                    alana Super Gardener

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                    So pleased it's sunny down in Cornwall today. My family are camping down there:smile:
                    I've just picked plums from my small tree - maybe enough for a crumble later.
                    I attacked the weeds at the back of the border and moved my sweet peas out of sight to go to seed.
                    Looked at our large willow which has a split bough. With the wind we're having it may come down on it's own. Hopefully without damaging anything.:fingers crossed:
                     
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                    • shiney

                      shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                      The branches on our plum trees are breaking under the weight of the crop. :cry3:

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                      • Kandy

                        Kandy Will be glad to see the sun again soon.....

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                        IMG_0990.JPG IMG_0983.JPG @shiney our plum trees started breaking the other year due to the weight of plums and Mr Kandy ended up having to prop up some of the branches to stop them going the same way as yours:sad:

                        We haven't been out in the garden yet as we have been for a good walk in between the rain showers :biggrin: The farmer round here has decided to spread unrotted pig muck over the fields and the smell is so bad we have to keep the windows and doors shut:yikes:

                        Anyway,he managed a bit more work than on the cherry tree trunk yesterday before rain stopped play,I mean work:biggrin: the two saw blades he had in his electric saw got blunted so we have had to trek to B&Q after our walk to buy some more as using the pruning saw was killing him:biggrin:
                         
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                        • Verdun

                          Verdun Passionate gardener

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                          Yummy crop there Shiney :wow:
                          Will you be removing the cherry tree Kandy?
                          Dont know what it's like elsewhere in Cornwall but still dry here...the sun comes and goes and looking bright and feeling warm .....and I picked a few pounds of runner beans and planted out wallflowers. Froze some rhubarb too. Despite the blight attack last weekend.........not 100% sure it was blight, think it was though.......the tomatoes look and taste wonderful. They are naked without any foliage at all......no wonder the toms are "reddening" fast:lunapic 130165696578242 5:
                          Persicaria Dikke Floskes arrived by courier. Lovely healthy plant with excellent root system but decided to pot it on for a week or two. It will grow fast and flower too before the summer's end.
                          Hoping to get grass cut again later.....for me mowing the lawn is a pleasure (front lawn of 150 sq metres and a smaller one at the back) and takes very little time but I understand those with larger areas of grass may not enjoy it quite as much :noidea:
                           
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                          • shiney

                            shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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                            @Kandy that's going to be a tough job rooting out. :rolleyespink: I'd be inclined to leave at that height whilst cutting through the roots. That way you can get good leverage on it when needing to rip it out. :blue thumb:

                            I've had to prop up branches on the plums and apples :phew:
                             
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