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A WINTER TALE

Ilene Alvis

  I haven't written an article for the bulletin for a couple years. I no longer have the seventy tanks I had and which I sometimes miss. What I don't miss is the three water changes a week, the endless filling of hungry little mouths, or the feeling my fingers were never going to be unwrinkled. What I miss is the beauty of the fish. The feeling of contentment when I looked around the hatchery and saw nothing but healthy, growing, beautiful fish. Or the excitement when a new spawn of betta's were beginning to color and seeing something new and interesting.  
  I have a bedroom where I once had a hatchery. This is good as my daughter came home and she would have had to develop gills to sleep there otherwise. However, no hatchery is a mixed bag. Glad my daughter's home. Happy to have no responsibilities so I can spend weeks gone in the motorhome. Relieved not to worry about velvet, power outages, ich, poor sales, fin rot, buying shrimp eggs, hydras, and endless endless water changes. But, I still miss the beauty of the fish.
  Okay, so much for laments. This article is about an aquatic critter not a fish. At least, it starts being an aquatic critter and becomes terrestrial. At least partly terrestrial. Have I piqued your curiosity? Here goes :  
I have several water gardens in my yard. You know those half barrels the stores all sell in the spring? We used several of those, lining them inside with black plastic then adding clay, potting soil and a thick coating of pea gravel to keep it from floating. In these we planted a variety of marsh plants like iris, miniature cattails, water poppies, etc. In the spring I usually drop a couple goldfish or a hand full of White clouds in the gardens to keep down the mosquitos. As the years went by we also attracted a small but loyal cadre of wild tree frogs. Their insistent calls early in the year tell me it's time to plant the peas, and start pulling weeds: it's springtime! They lay eggs in one of the barrels. Always the same one. I have no idea what makes it a better choice for their children than the others but they apparently know something I don't.

Being a long time tom-boy and collector of tadpoles, salamanders, and other things both creepy and not, they provide me with treasured memories of my childhood. I quietly monitor their development, and always put the white clouds in that particular barrel as the goldfish will eat the tadpoles. (Either that or eat so much of the algae that the tadpoles starve. All I know for sure is if there is goldfish in that barrel, there are never any tadpoles.)

                 
  fishAnyway, making a short story long, come last fall, just before the first freeze, I noticed there were still a half dozen unmetamorphosized tadpoles left in the barrel. (Not too sure if that's a word. The computer says it isn't but I'm going to use it anyway. You get the idea.) Well, I just couldn't let the little critters freeze to death, and I did have a handy container full of water. So, I brought them in for the winter. There was lots of algae in the container, a gallon sized battery jar with soil, gravel and some sort of unnamed aquatic plant that I had to winter inside, so it seemed the perfect solution. Turned out to be too much of a perfect solution and the little tadpoles began growing like crazy. Shortly a couple of them began sporting hind legs. Then the buds of front legs. Well, from my childhood experiences, I knew that as soon as the front legs popped out, they left the water, tail and all. And they were perfectly capable of climbing glass. Obviously the battery jar wasn't going to work for long.

flying fishFortunately I still had several two gallon tanks, with glass lids. I cleaned one up, put in gravel and banked it so half the tank was gravel and half was water, put a couple Anubis Nanna in the water and a weed of some sort in the gravel, (it looked nicer that way) and added the tadpoles. In days I had a tadpole, now frog, climbing on the glass. With the second problem solved, I now had a third; feeding the little, itty, bitty frog.

 

I use to have wingless fruit flies, when I had baby fish to feed, now however, the only fruit flies were fully winged in my compost pit and as soon as it froze hard, they'd be gone too. Chris, the owner of Phase II Pets in Port Orchard, came to my rescue. She let me dig through her cricket box and have as many itty bitty crickets I could find. She also happened to have an orange someone had left unattended and was crawling with fruit fly larvae. Between the two, the itty bitty frog got food.

It probably took two months for all the tadpoles to become frogs. And by then, the first and largest of the frogs was large enough to eat the smallest of them. So, despite Chris's continuing generosity and the sacrifice of uncounted crickets, the six tadpoles eventually became three full grown frogs.

two fish
 

I had told several people what I was doing, and most of them told me it was impossible to raise our local tadpoles to frogs. But, with a wealth of childhood experience, and lots of crickets, in a few weeks, when the frogs outside emerge from their winter sleep and make their presence known, I'll have three more to add to their number. It's been in interesting if unplanned winter project.    Happy fishing.

 

 

shark


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