|
Snag 'em, Bag 'em and Drag 'em
Even if you
don't regularly participate in the competitive end of our hobby
(Judged Koi Shows) it is worthwhile getting the hang of transporting
your koi in the safest and least stressful manner. I do mean stress,
both on your koi and you as well.
Your own stress
levels are judged best by you and your loved ones, but they will
not be reduced by elusive and edgy fish, soggy pants and fish sick
on arrival. Koi are primitive as metabolisms go. Being "cold-blooded",
they have only so much energy to expend on basic needs, such as
breathing, osmotic balance and resistance to disease. Any stress
(noise, vibration, sudden environmental changes, etc.) will alarm
the fish, activating its flight response and expending energy they
would normally use for routine maintenance. Transporting your fish
can include practically all of the harmful stressors to which it
is susceptible. Minimizing them will increase the likelihood that
you'll deliver it to its destination in a condition that will allow
it to recover and thrive. It's a good idea to fast the fish for
several days before a move. This will minimize the amount of ammonia
they'll have to deal with in the bags.
The Snag
Extracting
a koi from a pond is a task with a huge number of variables, based
roughly on the design and depth of the pond, the number and size
of the fish and the size and skill of you and your helpers. Larger
koi are less likely to panic, move more slowly than smaller fish
and are much more visible in the pond. This makes them much easier
to catch. Smaller fish have "Evade" hard-wired into their
tiny brains, and are fast, elusive and likely to jump. They are
experts at wedging themselves into spaces too small for your net
and are often hard to see, especially if your water has been clouded
up in your attempts to capture them. For this reason, your larger
fish should be your first targets if you are moving several fish.
You want them out of the way in your holding area while you and
your crew are fresh. The pursuit of the tiny will take up a lot
of time and effort, and you may quit in frustration, leaving them
in the pond to mock you forever (or until they get too big to hide!).
You will need
the following equipment:
- A generous
holding area, if the fish are being isolated or held while the
pond is cleaned
- Many fish
transport bags. These are large, heavy-duty plastic bags designed
for fish transport. They are 3 to 4 mils thick and very strong,
but not impervious. (If you need some, look in the Aquatic Eco-Systems
catalogue, page 209 or www.aquaticeco.com, search on "transport
bags".)
- Oxygen,
especially if the fish are traveling a long way, or will be in
the bags for longer than an hour or two. Air will do for short
trips.
- Big, sturdy
boxes. These can hold one or more bags o' fish. They can be heavy
cardboard at one end of the cost spectrum, or be plastic with
wheels and handles at the other. They should all have lids or
covers.
- Rubber
bands. Big, thick ones.
- Padding.
Old towels, newspaper, foam rubber, whatever.
- Cold packs,
especially for summer transport.
- Nets. Long,
rigid handles, big screens with small mesh.
- Help. Lots
of help. Preferably not tanked up on caffeine before the event.
- Seine net.
If your pond is large, you'll need to limit the area available
for your fish to hide. Lure your fish to their usual feeding area
and block off the area with the seine. It won't be perfect, but
it'll help.
- A "blue
bowl" or other smooth-sided basin large enough to briefly
hold your largest fish.
Right. The
goal here is to gently chivvy a fish into a bag with the minimum
of alarm and stress, get the bag out of the pond, treat it with
oxygen and get it into a box as smoothly as possible, with the absolute
minimum of splashing, shrieking, swearing and actual direct contact.
Station your
netters at opposite sides of the pond, select your target, and gently
ease your nets into the water. One of your crew should have the
bags and maybe a sock net handy. Slowly
guide your target fish towards the person with the bags and contain
the fish at the surface without actually lifting it out of the water.
The best thing to do here is have the transport bag partially filled
with pond water and ready to slide the fish into. This does mean
getting wet, but if all movements are slow and deliberate, it works
well, especially with the larger fish.
The smaller
the fish, the harder it gets. The trick here is to anticipate its
movements and block them with one of the nets. Little koi are great
jumpers and capable of fantastic turns of speed. Do not try to keep
up with their movements from behind. Even edge-on, water resistance
will slow your net movement enough to make the exercise futile.
Do not try to catch a fish with sudden net movements (hence the
"no caffeine" instruction). Small koi register that as
"attack" and take off. Do not give in to the temptation
to get in there with them and wrassle them into submission. They
are much better designed for the aquatic environment than you are,
and it will only give them another opportunity to mock you forever.
(See illustration, which depicts the ultimately unsuccessful and
embarrassing attempt of past MPKS president Yoshinogo Wakazashi
to capture and transport his prize Cha-Goi "Old Honker"
to the Third Annual MPKS Koi Show. The rest of the club is up in
his living room on the bluff above the pond, watching the debacle,
getting drunk, and laughing themselves sick.)

If direct
placement into the bag isn't practical or doable, chivvying the
fish into a sock net, then into the "blue bowl" and into
a bag from there may work better.
The Bag
Once the fish
is in the bag, adjust the amount of water to just cover its dorsal
fin and allow it to float off the bottom. Expel as much of the air
as you can and fill the bag with oxygen. This can be obtained from
industrial gas supply companies or welding supply houses. If you
do not have oxygen, hold the top of the bag as wide open as you
can, then close the neck of the bag rapidly, trapping as much air
as you can in the top of the bag. Twist the bag shut and secure
it with two strong rubber bands, secured first at the bottom of
the twist with a slip loop, then doubling over the twist and wrapping
the free end of the loop around the doubled, twisted bag neck. Larger
fish should be "double bagged" and all bags should be
carefully checked for leaks both before and after loading. This
is a great time to carefully inspect your fish for dings, dents,
ulcers and other signs of disease and trauma. Some fish will bleed
from the gills when transported. This is a sign of stress, and usually
is not harmful. Replace as much of the fouled water in the bag as
you can with fresh pond water, and then seal the bag.
Larger fish
should be packed one to a bag. Small fish will cohabit more easily.
The greater the fish density in a bag, the greater the stress and
the more likely it is that your fish will suffer injury.
Move the koi
into a storage box as soon as you can, padding the bottom with towels,
newspaper or foam rubber. Cover the bag with more newspaper or towels
and then close the box. If the weather is warm or if the koi will
be in the box for a prolonged time, a coolant pack under the bottom
towel will help keep the water cool and lessen stress on the fish.
The Drag
Once in the
box, it's time to load. Regardless of the vehicle, koi should be
loaded perpendicular to the direction of travel. Sudden starts or
stops with the fish aligned parallel to the direction of travel
can ram a fish's nose or tail into the ends of the box, injuring
it. Secure the boxes so they do not tip or shift.
Drive nice.
On arrival,
float the fish bags in the destination vat for a few minutes to
allow water temperatures to equalize. You will want to move the
fish out of the bags and into their destination water as quickly
as possible. Do this with a minimum of water mixing. If you can
lift the fish out of the bag with your hands (rings and watches
off, please!) or a sock net, this is preferable. Do not allow water
from the destination area to mix with the water in the bag, especially
if the fish has been in the bag for a prolonged time. Even a fasted
fish produces ammonia, and stressed fish produce more. The water
in the bag will become contaminated with the fish waste, but the
fish will be protected by the gradual decrease in pH caused by the
ammonia and other fish waste. The relatively
acidic conditions in the bag will ionize the ammonia
to less toxic ammonium ion, and the fish is able to tolerate
this. Mixing destination water with the contents of the bag corrects
the pH upward (alkaline), de-ionizing the ammonium to often lethal
levels of ammonia, and your fish dies right in front of you. Not
a good outcome.
Discard the
bagged water immediately.
You're there!
You're done!
Congratulations.
Note for Koi
Show exhibitors: Every one of our shows is run on the English system.
You are assigned a vat and only your fish will be in it. There is
NO mixing of fish, and every effort is made to prevent cross-contamination.
To this end, we request that you provide your own "blue bowl"
(Aquatic Eco-Systems catalogue, page 209 or online, search "Koi
Show Bowls) and net. Barring disastrous screw-ups, your fish should
be fine to be reintroduced into your pond immediately on arriving
home. If you have any doubts about this, please isolate them for
at least three weeks in warm water, feeding sparingly before reintroduction.
If you buy a fish from a vendor at the Trade Show and enter it in
the Koi Show, your fish will be placed in a show vat with other
fish from that vendor only. It is our strongest recommendation that
these fish be isolated
as outlined elsewhere on our site. See links to KHV
and SVC.
Respectfully
Submitted,
Bob Passovoy
President
MPKS
Home
|| Index of Articles
|