View Full Version : How often do you feed


PhotoJohn
03-20-2008, 01:37 AM
I was curious how often people feed their systems. I personally feed 1, 2, or sometimes 3 times a day.

Amphibious
03-20-2008, 07:31 AM
Fish are cold blooded, meaning their digestive tract operates slower at cold temperature, faster at warmer temps. Generally, the temps we keep our reefs at are considered warm. That means feeding our fish less often than a couple of times a day constitutes starving them. Your fish will never reach optimum health conditions, have an immune system capable of warding off disease, show true colors and will show more aggressive behavior feeding less often. Especially skipping days.

I ask people that feed less often, "How many times a day do you feed yourself??? Why would you treat your fish any other way???" The food that many people buy and feed their fish are not prime feeds. They generally feed flake, pelleted, or frozen brine shrimp. Not the best choices in the first place. They are OK but, OK food should be fortified with vitamins and supplemented with more nutritious food.

Dick

THEJRC
03-20-2008, 10:08 AM
4-8 times a day with different feeds every time, plus the extra little nibblins they nab when I target feed the corals nightly. Anenome and plate corals get a good helping of krill every other day so they get a nice extra tidbit then as well.

laurabolyard
03-20-2008, 08:26 PM
I am actually glad you brought up 'typts' of foods Dick. I was recently wondering what my REEFY FOLK thought of my critter diet.
I feed one a day (though after reading above, I feel kind of guilty!)

I alternate between frozen prime reef and mysis shrimp.

I occasionally turn off the pump and let them have their way with some live brine. I know no nutritional value, but its just once in a while, they love to 'catch' their food!!

I also alternate between rotifers and marine snow (once a week each, so every 3-4 days one or the other)

and of course silversides to anemone every other day

good? suggestions?

Jenn4183
03-20-2008, 08:34 PM
well I feed my fish 4 times a week, and feed my corals 3 times a week, nothing on sunday (i does my chemicals on sunday). I do a water change on wednesday.


Is that OK??

PhotoJohn
03-20-2008, 09:24 PM
live BS is okay if you load them first

dillan
03-20-2008, 09:34 PM
I feed my fish twice a day usually mysis and enriched bs and corals 2 - 3 times a week

THEJRC
03-21-2008, 01:32 AM
he he live bs even as a tantalizing treat regardless of nutritional value keeps the fish used to catching prey a little more I've found. Gut loading though is so simple and takes little time so why not fortify!

I Also think Dick has a good point though, how often one feeds is only a peice of the story. God forbid you yourself eat the same ramen cup o noodles at each meal, you wont be satisfied, happy, or healthy!

rroselavy
03-21-2008, 01:55 AM
I currently feed once the fish once per day around 8:30pm. I am going to switch to 2 times per day soon, although on weekdays I do not arrive home until 7:30pm. Tank lights go on at noon and out at 11:00pm, so I am trying to figure out how to feed twice during the weekdays yet have the feedings spaced far apart.

Spot fed corals are fed every other day.

I am currently feeding with Rod's Frozen Food (http://www.rodsfood.com/) (Shrimp, Scallop, Oyster, Clam, Squid, Octopus, Brine, Krill, Mysis, Grouper (or perch), Red Nori, green Nori, Broccoli, carrot, Frozen red plankton, Golden pearl (7 sizes), DTs Oyster eggs, Selco, Fresh hatched brine, Freshly harvested rotifers) and sometimes "Coral Heaven" from IPSF. Sometimes I supplement some extra drops of Selcon.

Victoria
03-21-2008, 09:23 PM
I feed 2 x a day once in the morning and once after the lights go out. I also add DT's every other day. And if the fish look thin I feed more. I watch my tank and tend to each need as I see it.

JustDavidP
03-23-2008, 10:55 PM
Once a day..

veriann
03-24-2008, 01:35 AM
As with dave - Once every day. - & garrenteed at least once a week i hand feed every polyp or animal just to keep in check with whats happening with the system in case im to busy to notice any subtle visual clues.
With high constituting inputs comes the greater need to export them, so water changes are high every week for me.

Danamck
03-24-2008, 10:41 AM
If I am not home during the day, the fish get fed once or twice in the evening. On weekends or days I work from home, it's 2 to 3 times. It's always the same amount of food, I just divide it up based on the number of feedings. i feed different foods all the time, and rarely does the same food get fed more than twice in the same week. I realize that many people make their own food mix and feed this exclusively - and I'm sure nothing is wrong with that. I just wouldn't want to eat the same thing everyday for the rest of my life, so I try and offer the greatest variety I can. (I have my own shelf in the freezer for all my fish foods!)

salt-rookie
03-25-2008, 11:00 AM
I feed 4 times per day.

keith p
03-25-2008, 03:02 PM
I have a question for people feeding more than once a day:
Are you using frozen or dry food? I use all frozen food. Should I defrost (and soak in selcon) in the morning and refrigerate the rest or defrost food every feeding? This is probably my main excuse for feeding only once a day...

microbius
03-25-2008, 04:45 PM
once a day enough food for about 30 seconds of feedig frenzy

with frozen blood worm/mysis/brine shrimp/a little microplankton all defrosted rinsed with ro/di mixed up refrozen thinly and broke off as reqiured and the very occaisional flake or marine s just incase off missing vitamins etc



:crazy:oh and of course monthly mussel meat for the hermits:crazy:

topbloke72
05-04-2008, 02:06 PM
Once a day with rod's food.. seems to work well.

Jmaddan
05-05-2008, 02:44 PM
I have 4 tanks setup and it depends what fish are in what tank...But I feed fish 2-3 x's a day... Coral's once every other day.

suep
05-05-2008, 03:58 PM
I just started hatching my own bbs.

Do I need to gut load them if I feed them just a few hours after they hatch?

If so, how do I 'gut load' them? I've tried adding a few drops of phyto in the water a couple hours before I feed them to the tank, is that what you mean?

CarmieJo
05-06-2008, 11:20 PM
Newly hatched brine shrimp still have their yolk sac and are very nutritious. After about 24 hours the yolk sac is absorbed and without gut loading they are virtually worthless. They are filter feeders and will eat whatever is in the water. Phytoplankton and vitamins are good choices for gut loading.

mysterybox
05-06-2008, 11:46 PM
once a day here!

suep
05-07-2008, 01:59 AM
So, I should add few drops of phyto to the jar? Do I want to get the water really green or just faintly tinted? And then wait an hour before feeding them to the tank? Or longer?

Thanks!

CarmieJo
05-08-2008, 07:12 AM
Sue,

Since they are filter feeders I am sure density plays a role but IDK how much because I don't gut load anything. So, here's a :bump: to get this in front of those who do.

JustDavidP
05-09-2008, 09:49 AM
You want to tint the water green (with phyto) or cloudy white (with Selcon or other additives) and wait until it is somewhat clear thereafter. At that point, you know that most of the nutritional value (phyto or selcon) has been taken up. This typically takes a little while (for me, about an hour) and then feed on.

Dave

suep
05-09-2008, 03:34 PM
Thanks!! :)