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Goldfish

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Penwern | 16:59 Mon 28th Dec 2009 | Animals & Nature
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Can anyone tell me about pond goldfish in winter. Do they hibernate? Do I feed them in winter?
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They don't hibernate but they are less acive. Remember they breathe oxygen so watch the ice from time to time, but don;t smash it.
I dont have any fish now but when I had a pond I only fed them April to October, and kept a rubber ball in the pond in the winter to stop the water freezing over
yeah, what I meant was break it up somehow so they can breathe, but smashing the ice is a bad way...
When my pond did freeze up I use to heat water in an old saucepan and hold the hot pan on the ice and it gradually melted the ice, (may take a few heatings of water before ice melts )
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Postdog and Val.24, Thanks for answers, very helpful
instead of a saucepan fill a plastic milk bottle with hot water it will not sink
We keep the oxygen bubbler on throughout the winter, it stops the pond icing over.
The reason you don't feed them int he cold weather is that they cannot digest the food properly and basically makes them sick because it sort of rots inside them. They will keep coming to the surface if they are still hungry, so just lessen the amount of food as it gets colder. Same again in spring you will notice them coming to the surface, just sprinkle a little food to see if they start taking it.
Fish are cold blooded creatures and therefore, their body temperature is the same as their surroundings (unlike warm blooded animals that have a constant body temp.) Technically, fish do not hibernate like, for example, a tortoise would but when the water temperature drops, the fishes metabolism slows down accordingly. Some pond fish such as golden orfe do not mind the cold at all (but they hate the warm) yet koi are the opposite and hate the cold (and love the warm water)

The reason we break the ice....or keep a small area open is to allow gas exchanges (nothing to do with "breathing oxygen" as cold water contains a lot of dissolved oxygen). In autumn, the pond often gets lots of dead leaves from the trees in the pond as well as dying pond vegetation. This sits on the bottom and decomposes causing various harmful gasses to be produced. If these get trapped under the ice, they can poison the fish. Well that's the theory anyway however i doubt the pond stays frozen for long enough for any harm to occur. If you do need to break the ice....use the hot water methods above, if you just crack the ice, the shock waves travel through the water and can scare the fish.

As for feeding, i will feed my koi all the time they want it. Cold fish won't eat, simple as that but sometimes, certain fish such as koi which are generally greedy, will feed in the coldest days. feed small amounts and if they don't want it after 10 minutes, remove the food and try again in a few days. Fish can go several months without food, relying on stored body fat.
The bit about food rotting in the fish's stomach is kind of true...obviously the metabolism has slowed down and so has digestion but it hasn't been proved to harm fish and not many people lose fish the day after feeding them in the winter.

So i hope this helps a bit.

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