Buddy no offense but if I were you don't ever keep your fish out of water! Always have another fish bowl or bucket something large enough to hold the amount of your fish with water in it.
2006-06-14 13:56:03
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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This depends how large your tank is.
If it is a bowl or 9 gallons or under do this:
Place 1/2 of the old water in a clean bowl, or cup. Net the fish and place them here.
Now you can dump the rest of the water in the dirty tank/bowl and clean with hot water.
After cleaning, fill the tank/bowl 1/2 way back up with new water. Add a water conditioner (de-chlorinator) to the water.
Now add the old water and the fish back into the tank.
It may appear cloudy for a few hours, but it clears up quickly. It may not seem to make sense to keep the old water - but it is actually safer for the fish to have some of the old water since it has good bacteria in it.
It is never a good idea to chane all the water at once. This can cause most fish to go into shock.
If it is a tank, then buy a gravel vaccum. These are very helpful for cleaning larger tanks. (10 gallons & up). With these you do not need to take the fish out. You just vaccum until 25% of the water is removed. Then you replace the water removed with new water and add the water conditoner.
Hope this helps. If you have any more questions about a gravel vaccum visit your local fish store/pet store (ie. Petsmart) and ask a fish associate to demonstrate how they work.
2006-06-14 22:00:33
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answer #2
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answered by Miss. Kitty 3
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"Gotten a clean fish tank" tells me that she offered it, set it up and placed fish in instantly so it in all likelihood hasn't been cycled which may were a sturdy component to do till now including fish. Google nitrogen cycle and skim up on it. you'd be aspiring to understand the total lot to look ahead to over the subsequent few weeks. you do not aspect out how massive the tank is or what type of fish are in it. which will make a distinction for your upkeep habitual. a million. you should do about a 20% water replace weekly. you do not take out each and each of the water. replace the water with new water that has been dechlorinated. 2. You under no circumstances opt to throw away your grave. purchase a gravel vacuum (the small length is more cost effective) and also you clean the bottom of the tank with that. 3. no longer effective in case you mean new water you're including or the water already in the tank. if you're protecting tropical fish you should have a heater in the tank to keep it on the well-known temperature for those fish. once you've goldfish they prefer chilly water yet choose 20 gallons for one fish. 4. you mustn't opt to be eliminating the fish so that they stay in the tank. 5. Rinse the filter out media in water that you've faraway from the tank. you purely replace it at the same time as it receives quite disgusting. sturdy bacteria stay in the media that you want to keep. 6. No chemical compounds. chemical compounds dissatisfied the stability of the water. Elbow grease is all that is required. 7. you should have a dechlorinator for the tap water. that is all you want. 8. You under no circumstances use chlorine. Chlorine is deadly to fish. 9. more desirable suggestions on your tank will be necessary to grant more desirable suggestion. **
2016-10-30 22:07:17
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answer #3
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answered by harib 4
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I never take my fish out of the water. I clean around them and to do small water replacements, I syphon out up to 30% of the water and replace it with treated water (must be the same temperature as tank water). This way I clean the rocks and/or gravel too! I can clean all tank apparatus and glass without ever moving the fish.
I've always been told that handling the fish and radically changing their water (such as cleaning everything at once and wrong temp) could be detrimental to the health of the fish.
2006-06-14 19:01:27
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answer #4
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answered by *ღ♥۩ THEMIS ۩♥ღ* 6
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a) how big is the tank?
b) what kind of fish?
c) small fish like in aquariums don't live too long out of water. My suggestion is worst case use a very clean bucket. (don't use detergents to clen it with that will do more harm than good.)
The other 2 questions need to be answered email me at kcracer1@yahoo.com
I have had fish tanks for 15 years (freshwater) and would be happy to answer other question you have about fish.
2006-06-14 13:58:33
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answer #5
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answered by kcracer1 5
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When I cleaned out my tank I put the fishes in another bowl. I usually put them back in their tank right after everything was back together. I say you probably best at leaving them in a seperate bowl for a couple or hours. That is more than enough to clean your tank. I hadn't had any of them die on me when they were in seperate water. Just make sure the water isn't too cold or too hot.
2006-06-14 13:56:45
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answer #6
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answered by butterflykisses427 5
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You take them out and put them in a smaller tank with some of the water from the dirty tank. When you are finished cleaning the tank, and the water is chlorine free, you put the fish back into the clean tank. FISH DIE OUT OF WATER, WE ALL KNOW THAT!
2006-06-14 13:57:59
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answer #7
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answered by niki-niki-tembo 4
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take out 20% of the water and use that for your fish (or more if needed) when your through cleaning the tank put back 20% of the old water, i know it doesn't sound like a good idea but if you dint your loosing vital bacteria that fish need to survive especially the bacteria that breaks down waste. it might cloud the water up a little but your filtration will take care of that.
2006-06-14 15:39:38
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Get a book on the subject, that's the best source of info.
For now get a gravel vaccum from a petstore. You don't have to take the fish out, just follow the directions on the gizmo. Trust me, I've had tanks awhile now and I wouldn't clean one any other way.
2006-06-14 13:57:09
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Step 1. Take cup out of place
Step 2. Fill cup with water
Step 3. Place fish in water
P.S. they will live in there for about 24 hours
2006-06-14 13:55:18
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answer #10
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answered by Brook D 2
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Use some of the tank water in a vessel as a holding tank...you have to lket your water sit from 24 to 48 hours after a change unless you have chemicals
2006-06-14 13:55:20
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answer #11
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answered by spaceytracey3 4
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