Alby was my first and arrived unexpectedly one evening in
September 2013.
Frantic knocking at my front door and loud high-pitched
barking marked her arrival and the beginning of my passion for fish-keeping.
In retrospect, the moment I wrestled the dogs out of my path
and opened the front door to greet an old friend was like opening a door to a
new life. If my life was a house, I just opened up another room.
Darren smiled and said “Hello hun.” And thrust a clear
plastic bag at me. “You have to take this.”
A white fish bobbed in the water that half-filled the
plastic bag.
“My fish are trying to kill it. He can’t live with me anymore.
You’ve got a fish tank, you have to take him. You don’t have a choice. If you
don’t take him, he’ll die!” He beseeched.
I did have a fish tank. Correction, my daughter had a fish
tank.
It was a 90 litre Perspex tank manufactured in China, that I
found on Ebay while considering birthday present ideas.
The tank, along with 4 gold fish, was given to Darcy on her
eleventh birthday. She kept it in her room and took care of the fish, until one
by one they died and were consumed by the others. We fished out the remaining
corpse (there was no one left to eat him) and left the tank where it was.
Months later on a weekend when we were doing a big clean up
at home, Darcy re-arranged her bedroom and had no desire to keep the tank.
I re-arranged the kitchen at the same time, creating a clear
space to put a secondhand cabinet I found at our local resource recovery centre
(the tip shop) with the fish tank on top.
I spent some time that weekend Googling answers to questions
like “how to set up an aquarium?” and made a trip to my local aquarium to pick
the brain of Michelle, proprietor of Rayonne Aquarium.
I picked up some water ager, water conditioner, an ammonia
test kit and a heater, having decided I wanted to try my hand at keeping
tropical fish. They seemed so much more interesting, and more striking looking,
than goldfish.
The most important thing I got on that trip to the aquarium
was advice. Really good advice like:
- Don’t use fresh tap water to clean your filter sponge, wash it in tank water. That way you’ll protect any good bacteria that may be living in the sponge.
- Regular water changes should keep the ammonia level down. Change a third of the tank water at a time.
- Test the ammonia level of your tap water, especially after a lot of rain. If the ammonia level is high, save your aquarium water change for another day.
- Don’t add unnecessary stuff to the water.
- Be patient and don’t stress.
I cleaned the gravel and the walls of the tank, put the
heater and filter into position and plugged them in, and filled the tank with
water. Using a small bucket I found at a $2 shop I slowly carried 90 litres of
water from tap to tank.
When it was done I turned the fluorescent light on and sat
back in a chair just looking at the tank. The gravel was in natural brown tones
and there is a picture taped to the back of the tank. A few plastic plants and
a barrel ornament that came with the tank when we first bought it. I tried to
imagine it with fish and wondered about the sort of fish that could live in it.
In the following weeks I used my spare time to read a bit
about tropical fish keeping. I didn’t have a lot of spare time though, my workload
was a bit crazy. I was also wracked with indecision about the type of fish I
would keep in the tank. The more I read, the more images of fish I saw, the
more entranced and confused I became. It seemed to be a decision that was too
big to make lightly and too trivial to focus on for too long. I kept putting it
off as other matters both professional and personal of much more importance and
urgency took my attention.
The tank sat empty for months with the filter and heater
running, just in case I made a snap decision. In the fish keeping world that’s
called “cycling” apparently. In reality it was just me being lazy and occupied
with other matters.
All that changed when Darren turned up on my doorstep waving
a fish in my face.
“C’mon. Let’s put him in your fish tank.”
“But I haven’t tested the water! Wait!” I protested,
following his charge through the house from front door to the kitchen at the
very rear. He was fleet of foot and I arrived in the kitchen in time to see him
open the tank lid and tip the white fish straight into the tank.
“Too late!” he cackled triumphantly.
I moved closer to watch my first fish explore his new home.
“How do you turn the light on darls?”
The pure white fish glowed prettily under the fluoro globe
and we both exclaimed. He was so beautiful.
“He’s an albino,” said Darren.
“Let’s call him Alby then,” I decided.
We toasted Alby with a cup of coffee and I made a mental
note to buy some fish food as soon as possible.
#tanktales

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