Thanks everybody.
I am an avid believer in retail therapy for sadness and have begun immediate treatment. So far in my period of mourning, I have liberated 2 more bettas from their 8oz cups at the lfs. I now have two male 'giants'- there will be no filter incidents with these guys. They are bruisers compared to my previous betta's body size. They are about 2" long in the body with big ole heads and supposedly they are youngsters. It'll be interesting to see how big they get. (Newman, send me some water. They'll weigh 8lbs by Christmas- inside joke) And one teeny little female crowntail. Crowntails are not my favorite, but she's a really great green color and an unattended kid had her cup sideways as he ran down the aisle hollering to his unseen mom that 'there's a fish in here!' I snatched her away from him, gave a quick lecture and figured she deserved to go away from there. The boys have their own smaller tanks, but she went into the 75g community tank. She was such fun to watch as she explored more space she has most likely ever seen. She flits around the plants, chases fry, checks out the cories, swims through the log, and generally is having a fabulous fishy time. She is smaller than my cardinal neons, so she must be young.
Thanks for all your advice on how to avoid filter issues in the future. I will take it all to heart, but for now I will enjoy my beautiful, spunky, shorter finned bettas
I am an avid believer in retail therapy for sadness and have begun immediate treatment. So far in my period of mourning, I have liberated 2 more bettas from their 8oz cups at the lfs. I now have two male 'giants'- there will be no filter incidents with these guys. They are bruisers compared to my previous betta's body size. They are about 2" long in the body with big ole heads and supposedly they are youngsters. It'll be interesting to see how big they get. (Newman, send me some water. They'll weigh 8lbs by Christmas- inside joke) And one teeny little female crowntail. Crowntails are not my favorite, but she's a really great green color and an unattended kid had her cup sideways as he ran down the aisle hollering to his unseen mom that 'there's a fish in here!' I snatched her away from him, gave a quick lecture and figured she deserved to go away from there. The boys have their own smaller tanks, but she went into the 75g community tank. She was such fun to watch as she explored more space she has most likely ever seen. She flits around the plants, chases fry, checks out the cories, swims through the log, and generally is having a fabulous fishy time. She is smaller than my cardinal neons, so she must be young.
Thanks for all your advice on how to avoid filter issues in the future. I will take it all to heart, but for now I will enjoy my beautiful, spunky, shorter finned bettas