Photo Gallery

Looking for ideas for your next koi pond or just fancy having a look around other peoples gardens and filter set ups? What ever you're hoping to see, you'll find the pictures here in our members ponds photo gallery.

Membership

If you're not yet a member but are interested in the wonderful hobby of Koi keeping, then please consider joining, bringing your knowledge and ideas and supporting the Middlesex & Surrey Borders BKKS section.

Articles

As well as the rafts of knowledge held by the club members there are also a large number of stories about how koi keeping has changed over the years, ways to get round common problems, and how people built their ponds.

Latest News

The dates for this years MSB Section closed show have been announced as the 17th and 18th of July.
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Club Meetings

We hold our meeting on the first Thursday of every month and start at about 8.00pm.
You will be most welcome to attend (free for first meeting) and we would hope that you would like to join our club section.

Events Diary

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General Health Care

There are many issues that can cause concern to our fish, this article, whilst by no means definative, aims to give you an indication of the main areas of concern to keep an eye on.

Water Quality
Any differing water parameters can have a major impact on the well being of our Koi.
Generally, in Japan, the water is quite soft with a pH around 6.0 to 7.0. We then introduce them to generally hard water with a pH of around 8.0 or more. i.e., at least 10 time more alkaline than they have been used to all their lives. This on its own produces a major shock to the koi’s system and coupled with the stress created by the journey from Japan as mentioned above, it is quite remarkable that these new imports survive the first week in their new environment at all!

 

Quarantine Regimes
So what I here you say, this has been happening for years, why in some years do we seem to get more health problems than others? Well read on ‘cause there are a number of other factors which may not be so obvious – like our quarantine regime!
We seem obsessed with the idea that the new Koi imports are riddled with parasites and bacterial disease and that we need to wear breathing apparatus and surgical gloves to go near them!
Some Koi dealers still feel obliged to dump their new imports into some frothing cocktail of medications when the new fish arrive just in case they are carrying something nasty.
So we treat our newly arrived fish, stressed up to the nines from their journey, to a nice bath of Potassium or Chloramine or Malachite – just in case! Nice one!!!
Koi need excellent water quality and little else after being subjected to their journey and the stresses induced. After they have begun to settle in for a week or so then is the time to consider appropriate treatments – but only if required. If the Koi are free of parasites, we don’t need to treat for them at all.

 

Genetic Weakness
The fact is that our Koi are produced by selective inbreeding with parent fish being mated with offspring from previous spawning in order to improve colour and pattern. It is my belief that for every year that goes past, and the pattern of inbreeding continues, our Koi are becoming progressively genetically weaker and this renders them far more susceptible to disease (as for any pedigree animal). Fortunately, breeders do replace breeding stock from time to time, either because they are forced to as a result of the death of one of the parent stocks, or more frequently because they need to improve a particular trait of the offspring produced, e.g. size, pattern, colour etc.
Also, it is pleasing to note that some breeders are now introducing fresh bloodlines into their broodstock with the specific intent of improving the strength of the bloodline. A super example of this is Sakai in Isawa. (Matsunosuke), who has in recent years been introducing Magoi back into his breeding stock in order to improve both the size of offspring but also the strength. He has been doing this for the last few years and I have to say that the result, which I have experienced, is that his fish have been relatively free of disease problems over the last three years or so.
If you are unfortunate enough to experience a disease problem with your Koi collection, it will almost certainly be the most highly inbred varieties that suffer first, with Go Sanke and Utsuri varieties most at risk, and Asagi and Chagoi least vulnerable as they are closer to the original Koi and are subsequently much stronger genetically.
Breeders husbandry. We have to remember that Koi farms are commercial entities and are concerned to get their product to market in peak condition. They are however; less concerned with what happens after the fish leaves their premises i.e., they are not so concerned with the long-term health of their stock. Their treatment and husbandry are directed at short-term benefit.

 

Misuse of Antibiotics
This is a most worrying problem of them all. Not to be confused with the prophylactic treatment using antibiotic, but with the legitimate use of antibiotic to treat identified problems.
It started with oxylinic acid, the first antibiotic to be used and abused so much in Japan that it is now just about useless. Why? ‘cause the bugs have mutated and become immune to the drug'. This is happening more and more, and for the first time last year, we saw evidence that the same thing is happening to Baytril, up till now one of the main weapons in the fight against bacterial disease. Once the breeder has discovered a drug that works – he uses it en mass and bugger the consequences!
Now we are finding that Baytril and indeed other important drugs are far less effective against common bacteria.
This is one reason why people have been jumping on the bandwagon and saying that there are new, resistant super bugs and viruses appearing in Koi imports.
The truth is that it is the same old aeromonas that are causing the problems because they are becoming resistant to our everyday drugs.
Maybe they are super bugs, but if they are then WE HAVE MADE THEM THAT WAY. Yes, it’s not just the good old Japanese breeder who are to blame, for we have to take our share of the blame as well.
As any doctor will tell you, if you are prescribed a course of antibiotics, you must finish the course and not stop taking the drug when you feel better. The reason is that you must kill all the bacteria. Any left that survive can develop a resistance to the drug used and then breed and pass this resistance on. Koi given antibiotic should be injected with a course of three or four injections to ensure that the drug has the desired effect. One injection is not enough, and there is a very real risk that Koi treated in this way will pass on resistant bacteria to their fellow pond inmates, even if they themselves get better.

 

Quarantine Again
A period of quarantine is vital to catch any potential problems and keep them isolated with the new stocks. Ignore this simple rule at your peril. A number of hobbyists last year ignored this rule (not just me) but apparently imported the virus mentioned above with the result that they wiped out their entire collections. It can and does happen – so be warned!

 

Disease Resistance
Another theory about this, and that is all it is, but evidence has suggested now and on several occasions that fish newly introduced into an established collection i.e. not just newly imported fish, can introduce ‘new’ bacteria into the existing stocks and whilst this can cause health problems with the existing collection, the newly introduced stocks are appear to remain unaffected. This also can happen in reverse and the newly introduced stocks can be susceptible to disease by being introduced to ‘old’ bugs currently in the environment, which apparently have no detrimental affect on the existing stocks.
Over the last year or so however, we have also again seen a very large number of existing Koi collections that have been affected by all kinds of disease problems, and many of these have not introduced any new fish at all. How many times have we heard ‘my fish have been fine for years, but suddenly this year I have suffered losses’?
So if it is not new fish bringing in problems, what are the causes of disease. Well there are the same reasons that there have always been, and some of these may not be as obvious as first thought.-

 

Poor Water Quality
We get complacent, don’t both to check our water parameters weekly, forget the weekly water change and keep chucking in mountains of food……Until eventually our koi are showing signs of ulceration, or parasites and when we check our water we find that ammonia and nitrite levels are too high.
Make no mistake, low levels of nitrite and ammonia which are permanent will stress your koi. Stress can lead to either parasite infestation or bacterial disease or both.
We must bear in mind that our koi are living in an artificial, closed environment; a bacterial soup if you like and we need to be vigilant to ensure premium quality water conditions at all times.
Overstocking. Still one of the biggest killers of koi. Leads to poor water quality as above and an increased chance of cross infection. Once one fish develops a problem, it’s neighbour's can quickly succumb. The general rule of thumb is one fish inch to every 10 gallons. I know most of us don’t stick to this rule but it is a fact that the higher the stocking rate, the greater is chance of a disease outbreak occurring

 

Inappropriate Treatments
Your fish are jumping; it’s spring so your fish must be suffering from parasites. Chuck in some Malachite and Formalin just in case. Result – fish that were probably very happy and full of the joys of spring and free of parasites are now stressed after a week or so living in chemicals that they didn’t need. Obviously the pond may need medicating from time to time, but ensure that you investigate the cause of any perceived problem and apply the correct treatment

 

Cleaning out the Filter
Some hobbyists still believe they should be cleaning out their filter every week and switching off their pumps altogether in winter. I am amazed at just how often I have come across disease problems apparently caused by these factors. If you need to clean your filter out every week, it’s the wrong filter and you need to do something about it! A mature filter should not need cleaning more than once per year and then only one chamber at a time

 

Poisons
Not as uncommon as it may sound, with inappropriate wood preservatives, poor fibre glassing and use of dangerous substances, such as polystyrene coming into contact with the water, closely followed by inadvertent dosing with weed killers or slug pellets. I know of a least one very toxic weed killer which is guaranteed to kill patio weeds for up to 3 years with just one treatment which is currently being offered in the koi market as a pond additive to kill blanket weed. And we wonder why we get problems!!

 

There are of course a myriad of other reasons that could potentially lead to a disease problem but most of these result in poor water quality which is the ultimate culprit in the vast majority of cases.