Tips For Winter Photography

Tips For Winter Photography
By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=David_L_Whittle]David L Whittle

Don’t put your camera away at the end of fall. Winter time is an opportunity to use your camera in lots of different ways.  We should start by covering a few points to consider when using your camera in winter .

Number 1 is dress for the weather! There is nothing worse than being cold, wet and miserable.
Take a warm drink?

Secondly, you need to take a few basic precautions, or just a little care and protection, with your camera.

If it is cold when you take your camera out of the bag, car, house or whatever, you will be moving it from a warmer environment to a cold one. You will notice that the camera, lens and viewfinder will mist up

This is condensation. Do not rub the lens to clear it. This will completely obscure your nice, clean lens.

Wait for a while until it clears – that is when the camera cools down to the surrounding temperature.
A handy “tool” to carry is a microfiber towel for wiping any moisture off the body. These towels can be found in most outdoor/camping stores.
Do not put a wet camera back in the bag.

If it is wet or raining keep the camera in a plastic bag, one of those you can buy from any grocery store, and make a hole for the lens. You can use the controls through the bag. Cameras, especially digital cameras do not like to get wet. Water and electronics do not go together.

Batteries do not like the cold either and the charge will not last as long during cold weather. The solution is to take spare batteries and keep them somewhere warm, like your inside pockets.

Now we are ready to take photographs why go to all this trouble?

Winter is a time to take dramatic shots of frost, snow and ice, stark landscapes, mysterious mist and fog, and is also ideal for black and white photography.

The light in winter is less so increase exposure and use a tripod or similar to steady the camera.
If using a compact camera try using “night” mode.

However, if there is snow on the ground there will be a lot of reflected light so exposure needs to be reduced.
If you do not have a DSLR camera use the “bright sunlight” mode.

Alternatively, focus on the darker areas of your scene, apply focus lock by pressing the the shutter release halfway, then swing back and set your scene and shoot!

Wet streets, artificial lighting, reflections in wet streets, low winter sun – the list is endless and only limited by your imagination.

In all instances, if your camera is capable, bracket all your shots. You can set to auto or manual bracketing. Check how to set up for your camera in your manual.

With a little practice you will be able to get a least that one great shot out of the bracketed shots.

Remember that with digital cameras you can get an instant replay, adjust and take again until it is right, and also that most digital imaging software on your computer can enhance your shots further.

Good luck with your photography!

David Whittle has written articles on digital photography aimed at beginners and novices, with the minimum of technical details. http://www.simpledigitalphototips.com

Article Source: [http://EzineArticles.com/?Tips-For-Winter-Photography&id=1656204] Tips For Winter Photography

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3 Ways to Invite Peace Into Your Life This Holiday Season

Probably the greatest memories of past and present are the times when our family members join together – sharing food, song, laughter and memories. There truly is no greater peace for the holidays than giving, sharing, and family. Here are three ways you may be able to invite peace for the holidays!

3 Ways to Invite Peace Into Your Life This Holiday Season
By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Frances_C_Rodriguez]Frances C Rodriguez

Uh-oh, it’s almost holiday time again! For some, just the thought makes them shudder like a January snowstorm. It’s the stress and expectation and worry if everything isn’t just so.

This year, I invite you to bring Peace into your holiday season! And I have three ideas on how to accomplish this.

Idea one is to simply announce, before the season gets into full swing, that you would like to have everyone consider bringing peace into the holiday! Peace can be so many things… it can be old traditions and new ones… it can be asking people to say nice things to each other… it can be giving a bit more than the year before.

Idea two is about remembering good things in the holidays – not just today but from yesterday and desiring to take good things with you into tomorrow and beyond! People just try to get through the holidays… dreading them, wishing they’d hurry up and be done. But then, in a year or ten or more, what can you look back upon? What memories can you share with the loved ones of tomorrow?

Idea three is about bringing old traditions forward and merging them with new ones. I personally love thinking about our old family traditions. When I do, I get the opportunity to reunite with my lost family members like my mother, father, and grandparents. It also gives me a chance to share memories with my nieces and nephews.

One of the things we had always loved to do growing up was cook together. Mama had loved cooking, especially at holiday time. She had cooked for the family as well as the church. And when I have the chance to cook with my niece, it’s a beautiful reminder of the past as well as a new memory for the future.

Another memory I had of the past was sitting at the Thanksgiving table. One year we had just started going around the table and have everyone say something they were grateful for. It had been new that year and an old tradition ever since!

Some of our old traditions had faded or changed. When Mama had been alive, she’d put together baskets to hand out to the less fortunate in the church. It had been a wonderful feeling; giving to others. Though, when Mama had gotten sick, the tradition had fallen away. We compensated by giving monetary donations to the church instead.

Probably the greatest memories of past and present are the times when our family members join together – sharing food, song, laughter and memories. There truly is no greater peace for the holidays than giving, sharing, and family.

Frances is an author, vocalist, and speaker. She focuses on Latino traditions, music, and faith. She is inspired by her mother, Flora, and her family of seven brothers and sisters. She has inspired people through sharing her mother’s legacy and encourages others to share their family’s legacies. Visit her website to sign up for inspirational messages, monthly newsletter, and updates at [http://www.floraslegacy.net]http://www.floraslegacy.net.

Article Source: [http://EzineArticles.com/?3-Ways-to-Invite-Peace-Into-Your-Life-This-Holiday-Season&id=9229395] 3 Ways to Invite Peace Into Your Life This Holiday Season
By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Frances_C_Rodriguez]Frances C Rodriguez

Uh-oh, it’s almost holiday time again! For some, just the thought makes them shudder like a January snowstorm. It’s the stress and expectation and worry if everything isn’t just so.

This year, I invite you to bring Peace into your holiday season! And I have three ideas on how to accomplish this.

Idea one is to simply announce, before the season gets into full swing, that you would like to have everyone consider bringing peace into the holiday! Peace can be so many things… it can be old traditions and new ones… it can be asking people to say nice things to each other… it can be giving a bit more than the year before.

Idea two is about remembering good things in the holidays – not just today but from yesterday and desiring to take good things with you into tomorrow and beyond! People just try to get through the holidays… dreading them, wishing they’d hurry up and be done. But then, in a year or ten or more, what can you look back upon? What memories can you share with the loved ones of tomorrow?

Idea three is about bringing old traditions forward and merging them with new ones. I personally love thinking about our old family traditions. When I do, I get the opportunity to reunite with my lost family members like my mother, father, and grandparents. It also gives me a chance to share memories with my nieces and nephews.

One of the things we had always loved to do growing up was cook together. Mama had loved cooking, especially at holiday time. She had cooked for the family as well as the church. And when I have the chance to cook with my niece, it’s a beautiful reminder of the past as well as a new memory for the future.

Another memory I had of the past was sitting at the Thanksgiving table. One year we had just started going around the table and have everyone say something they were grateful for. It had been new that year and an old tradition ever since!

Some of our old traditions had faded or changed. When Mama had been alive, she’d put together baskets to hand out to the less fortunate in the church. It had been a wonderful feeling; giving to others. Though, when Mama had gotten sick, the tradition had fallen away. We compensated by giving monetary donations to the church instead.

Probably the greatest memories of past and present are the times when our family members join together – sharing food, song, laughter and memories. There truly is no greater peace for the holidays than giving, sharing, and family.

Frances is an author, vocalist, and speaker. She focuses on Latino traditions, music, and faith. She is inspired by her mother, Flora, and her family of seven brothers and sisters. She has inspired people through sharing her mother’s legacy and encourages others to share their family’s legacies. Visit her website to sign up for inspirational messages, monthly newsletter, and updates at [http://www.floraslegacy.net]http://www.floraslegacy.net.

Article Source: [http://EzineArticles.com/?3-Ways-to-Invite-Peace-Into-Your-Life-This-Holiday-Season&id=9229395] 3 Ways to Invite Peace Into Your Life This Holiday Season

 

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What Is Motivation? A True Story to Illustrate the Meaning

This article is the first in a series I am writing sharing all of my knowledge built up over the last 17 years working in the field of self improvement and motivation. this first installment uses a true story of one of my clients to explore; What is motivation How to ensure you are ‘positively motivated’ A good read written with the genuine intention of helping others get themselves positively motivated to achieve the very best results for themselves and the ones the love.

What Is Motivation? A True Story to Illustrate the Meaning
By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Richie_Saunders]Richie Saunders

What is motivation? It’s a question I have been asked so many times. I have been working in the field of motivation for 17 years now. It is not only my career it is my passion and something that I enjoy both educating and improving in others and also studying myself.

I feel driven to write this article due to what I see happening around me now on a daily basis. So many are suffering and feeling battered and bruised due to the incompetence and greed that now seems to govern our world. From self-serving politicians and the privileged few who seem to run our governments for personal gain to the large corporate machines that seem intent on fleecing every penny from us mere ‘common folk’ it can be hard just to keep yourself going.

In this series of articles I will endeavour to help you understand;

� What motivation is and the mechanics that drive our own motivation

� How we can ensure we are ‘Positively Motivated’

� How to overcome the barriers that can so often dampen and dilute our ‘positive’ motivation

I do this because I genuinely care, I do this because I know that your life, my life and everyone’s life can be so much more fulfilling and rewarding with only a few very simple little tweaks to the way we perceive ourselves and the world around us.

So ‘What is Motivation?’

Firstly ‘motivation’ is just a word, the dictionary definition is;

motivation

noun

1 a reason or reasons for doing something.
2 desire to do something; enthusiasm.

The first definition ‘a reason to do something’ is the most accurate and concise definition. In all the years I have been working with individuals from a huge spectrum of backgrounds and professions it is so evident that we are always motivated. With every action and behaviour we give clues to our motives and what we are motivated by or to do. Even as you sit here now reading this you are motivated!

The point being that motivation is a constant, it drives everything we do and all of the results/outcomes we achieve. This is such an important point if you really want to understand motivation. So often people wrongly associate motivation with positive actions and positive results/outcomes however even when we are acting and behaving in a way that serves no tangible benefit to ourselves we are motivated to do so.

You see motivation is driven by our emotional state and how we perceive both ourselves and the world around us. Recently I have been working pro-bono with some long-term unemployed clients. My clients are genuinely intelligent, capable and competent individuals who have been caught in the centre of the economic storm that has engulfed nearly all of us in some way. One man in particular, I shall call him Adam for this article (an alias to protect his identity), is a good example of both positive and negative motivation.

Adam was a successful and driven professional. Until the end of 2009 he was a performing sales director in the printing industry. He played golf, had a nice company car, went on two holidays a year and lived a very comfortable life with his family. Then the business he had helped develop and grow got into financial trouble. They were performing and had a good client base and his sales team were performing well, however, the company had expanded in 2008 and borrowed the money from the bank to increase their production to meet demand. This debt eventually engulfed the business and the bank was unwilling to renegotiate their terms even considering the temporary difficult trading conditions. Sadly, and quite abruptly, in November 2009 the business was forced into insolvency. Adam lost his job.

I first met Adam just after he was made redundant. He came to an executive job club I had set up for one of my clients. My first impression of him was that he was hugely experienced, competent and very marketable. He was confident that he could find a new job quickly and looking at his C.V. I had to agree that he would be an excellent candidate for any business looking to improve their sales function. Adam was confident and positive and a joy to work with. He not only played an active role in the job club for himself but was excellent working with and advising some of the other members. Then one day he stopped coming. I heard nothing from Adam so assumed, understandably I am sure you will agree, that he had found another job.

I next encountered Adam in May 2011. To be honest I didn’t actually recognise him. He was a shadow of himself. He looked dishevelled, beaten up and brow beaten. His positive air and drive had deserted him and he now had an aura of cynicism that followed him into the room. We sat and talked and I saw such a difference from the person I first met just a few years before. Gone was his positive outlook and confidence. Gone was the smile and desire to help others and share his experiences. All of these positive attributes had been replaced with a bitterness that seemed to take over his whole being.

I share this story with you because it illustrates the good and bad of motivation. It shows how our perception of ourselves and the world around us directly impacts on our behaviours and our motivators that in turn impacts on the results we can, and do, achieve. You see Adam had stopped coming to the job club not because he had found a new job but because he had run out of time and money. The bank was trying to repossess his house and push him into bankruptcy. Adam stopped coming, as he later admitted, because he was ashamed of the situation he found himself in and genuinely believed that he could no longer be of assistance to the other members and the group as a whole (pride works in funny ways sometimes!).

The Adam of 2011 was, as I mentioned before, engulfed and overcome with bitterness. We sat and chatted for a couple of hours and I heard, sadly, what I here so often from those caught in similar situations. Adam unleashed a tirade of negative vitriol against what our society had become. He lambasted the banks and corporations for destroying the fabric and stability of our economy, he viciously attacked the government for their pandering to the banks and corporations whilst leaving the honest hard working individuals to suffer and lose their homes and their pride. He was, on face value, a changed man.

Now, I am not in any way criticising Adam. In fact I totally agree that we do live in an epoch where we, the people, play second fiddle to those in power as you will no doubt surmise from my opening gambit to this article. The problem was simple, what good was this doing for Adam? How was it serving him? And, most importantly for this article, how had it effected his motivation?

I asked Adam about his current job hunting activity. What was he doing to improve his situation? The answer I got is all too common in the present climate “Nothing, I gave that up months ago. I mean what’s the point! There are no jobs out there and definitely not for a 52 year old man like me. No-one wants a 52 year old working for them when they can have some young graduate at a much lower salary!”

NB: at this point I feel it important to point out that I encounter as many ‘young graduates’ who cannot find suitable work as I do people of Adam’s age. Age is definitely NOT a barrier unless YOU perceive it to be.

So, how does this illustrate what motivation is?

As I wrote earlier: ‘motivation is a reason for doing something’

Even if that ‘something’ is nothing! Adam, like so many, had allowed his situation and all of the negative/painful experiences to affect how he saw himself. His perception of himself had been muddied by the external influences and the reality of existing, and being directly caught up in, the most dramatic economic slump any of us have experienced in our lifetime. The impact of this had changed his motivation because it had changed his view of the world he lived in. Where prior to all of this happening he had looked out on the world and seen hope, opportunity and possibility he now only saw suffering, pain and anguish. Where before he was motivated to achieve and find solutions for both himself and his business now he was motivated to do nothing and to wallow. His actual driver for this change in motivation is extremely common (some of your reading this will see similarities in your own experiences) he, like all of us, was motivated to prove himself right!

Now, this is no different to when he was a performing sales director. He believed in himself and that he was a competent and high performing executive and his actions and behaviours enabled him to prove himself right by developing a successful career and sales team. However, with his change in how he now perceived himself, “a 52 year old man on the scrap heap of life” (NB: his words not mine) his actions and behaviours now followed again to prove himself right.

I worked with Adam for the next three weeks and he attended my course ‘Breaking your shell’. He started to realise what he was allowing to happen to himself and he started to take ownership of his own self-perception. Over those weeks he (the man I met in 2009) came back, he started to realise that actually he had a lot to offer any business, he was highly skilled and extremely capable. He could be a valuable asset to any business and he was both marketable and employable. He got a job after four weeks. Not because of our conversation, even though sometimes we all need a little subjective feedback to kick start our rehabilitation to what we truly are and can be, but because he remembered who he was. A good and capable man who finds solutions and delivers positive results and he went out and started to prove himself right.

So in conclusion the answer to ‘What is motivation?’ the answer is as simple as ‘the reason for doing something’. What I hope you get from reading this article is that it is up to you to decide what it is your do. My advice is simple, remember who you are, think about what you have done and can do and see yourself in the most positive way this will ensure you go on to prove yourself right.

I hope you find this article useful in some way.

Regards and good fortune,

Richard.

By Richard Saunders

i have worked in motivation and developing people for 17 years and wrote this article as the first installment of a series where I am endeavour to share all I have learned in the hope that others can become more motivated for themselves. [http://www.liberateconsultants.com]

Article Source: [http://EzineArticles.com/?What-Is-Motivation?-A-True-Story-to-Illustrate-the-Meaning&id=7011880] What Is Motivation? A True Story to Illustrate the Meaning

 

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Chilled Out Koi: How Koi Survive Frozen Ponds in Winter

Chilled Out Koi: How Koi Survive Frozen Ponds in Winter
By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Grant_W_Stoecklin]Grant W Stoecklin

If you live in a northern climate then chances are good that you see snow and ice as does your koi pond. Its natural to worry about your koi during the winter periods, especially if they have been around for years and years. Fortunately, koi are adapted to dealing with cold temperatures and an iced-over pond. They have a few tricks up their “sleeves” to deal with the inevitability of ice cold water.

Regulating Body Temperature

Thermoregulation of animals or how an animal regulates its body temperature can be a confusing subject. For example, within the subject of thermoregulation there is:

– Ectothermic

– Endothermic

– Mesothermic

– Heterothermic

– Homeothermic

– Poikilothermic

– “Cold-blooded”

There’s a lot of variations in the world of temperature regulation in animals but to make it more straightforward for koi owners you should know that your fish are ectothermic,which means that their internal body temperature is governed strictly by the ambient temperature (or in this case, the water temperature). So that must mean that all fish are ectotherms, right? Not necessarily. Unfortunately, biology is not always consistent. For example, the bluefin tuna and some sharks create internal heat from muscle activity yet are still largely affected by water temperature which puts them in a category known as mesothermy. Furthermore, the term “cold-blooded” is actually not all that accurate. A “cold-blooded” lizard in the hot desert sun can achieve an internal temperature greater than that of humans. So in everyday conversation its just easier to refer to mammals and birds as endotherms and just about everything else as ectotherms.

Biological Activity and Temperature

You have probably noticed throughout the seasonal changes that as the water temperatures get colder your fish start to become less active. As a result, they require less food and at somewhere between 50 and 40 degrees F they stop eating all together. Ectotherms are able to pull this off because they don’t have to maintain a certain internal temperature and, in fact, they can get away with using as little as 10% of the energy of what a mammal would need. As temperatures fall, the rate of internal biological activity decreases which includes things as basic as how fast a muscle can twitch. This concept in biology is known as the Q-10 coefficient.

Planning for Winter

There’s not much activity going on with your fish, on the inside or outside. They don’t need food and not as much oxygen however its still a good idea to keep some of your pond unfrozen with a de-icer for gas exchange (and some pond owners will run aeration all year long). One of the things your koi will do is try to hang out in the warmest part of the pond and that will subsequently be the deepest part. In general though, its a good idea, when designing/building a koi pond, that you make it at least 3 feet deep to avoid the possibility of total pond freeze. Another thing you may want to keep in mind is that adding salt to your pond before winter will lower the freezing point of water and artificially cause your water to reach a super low temperature which can potentially harm your koi.

Koi in Dormancy

So what exactly are they doing under the ice? Sleeping? Playing cards? As with thermoregulation there are a lot of different ways to go inactive during winter (or periods of less-than-ideal conditions). There is:

hibernation in mammals

brumation in reptiles

diapause in insects and

aestivation in invertebrates

but ultimately your koi under ice are in a state of dormancy. Essentially, they are simply “chilling out” in a state of super decreased activity and metabolism while waiting for spring. Perhaps you don’t get to enjoy your koi as they mill around under the ice but just think of the money you are saving not buying koi food!

Have you ever wondered what happens to your koi with the onset of winter? What are they doing under an iced over pond? Are they hungry and looking for food? In this article I discuss the physiological and biological changes that occur to your fish with the onset of cold water. I also discuss simple things you can do to prepare your pond for ice that will make it the most comfortable for your koi. If you’re wondering about your fish in winter even how to change the way you feed in fall ( http://koi-care.com/feeding-koi-water-temperatures-change/ ) then please see more at my site.
Thanks for stopping by!

Article Source: [http://EzineArticles.com/?Chilled-Out-Koi:-How-Koi-Survive-Frozen-Ponds-in-Winter&id=8942441] Chilled Out Koi: How Koi Survive Frozen Ponds in Winter

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The Fun and Rewarding Hobby of Keeping Pet Goldfish

The Fun and Rewarding Hobby of Keeping Pet Goldfish
By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Jennifer_L_Fouts]Jennifer L Fouts

Have you ever discouraged yourself from owning pet goldfish because of what other previous goldfish owners have said about them, particularly the negatives? Well, you shouldn’t; especially if you can’t vouch for the truth on why their goldfish originally died! Perhaps the owner tried to keep the fish in a bowl, after partaking in the TV show myth of happy goldfish swimming in an adorable round bowl. Or, maybe the environment was not a bowl, but it was still confining; depending on how many goldfish the owner was keeping at a time (Goldfish need to swim in schools-that applies to just about every type of fish known to man-except “Siamese fighting fish” or Bettas). Or who knows-maybe this person wasn’t on the up and up when it came to some of the important key points of maintenance. Goldfish care is certainly not rocket science, but they too are not a “set and forget” kind of hobby-I have seen all too many perfectly good pre-owned aquariums for sale at second-hand stores and other places-It makes me sad to see that; perhaps these owners “didn’t have the time” for this hobby after awhile. I cannot speak for everybody who eventually abandons fishkeeping-but it’s kind of a shame to see some people turn their backs on such a rewarding hobby. I don’t want that to happen to you. Let’s look at some of the finer points of owning pet goldfish…

The first is the beautiful colors and patterns. Many out there you will find are not completely “orange”. They have patterns of golden yellow, black, and white mixed in. The fancier the goldfish (such as fantails and moors) the more varied these patterns will be, but even common goldfish can be striking, too. One of mine is two-toned in white and orange. You will also find that goldfish are friendly, intelligent, alert (you will never forget to feed them as they will be greeting you at the glass as soon as it’s time!) And they subsist on a fairly varied diet..pellets and flakes are good, but they’ve been known to enjoy spinach and shelled peas, brine shrimp and bloodworms. If you like live aquarium plants, I would refrain from keeping them around goldfish as they will nibble on them too.

You will also find that goldfish are hardy and long-lived (Japanese koi live even longer-some up to 20 years or more!) I’ve had the same orange and white pet goldfish for going on three years so I can tell you they are pretty tough. They are not completely immune-there are a few goldfish diseases like ick and swimbladder that definitely require attention and solitary quarantining. A goldfish lifespan depends on different things-but do not underestimate the “key points” which I will talk about in the next paragraph. The first point is their habitat.

Yes, absolutely, 100 percent. You NEED to keep them in a tank… NOT a bowl. I would strongly advise you against purchasing one of those “mini” or “nano” tank kits if you plan on keeping goldfish-save those for your solitary Bettas in the future. The tank needs to be fairly roomy-doesn’t have to be gigantic (in such a case, you’d be better off keeping them in a backyard garden pond, where they will thrive in large numbers.) Many experts will tell you that you will need a 30 gallon tank at least. If you own a 29 gallon capacity tank; no big deal here as that’s just one gallon off. There are friendly “natural” tank-cleaners like pleckos and Chinese algae eaters that can give your tank a little cleaning boost. The reason for this larger size is that a bigger tank will keep the water pollution issue to a minimum. Goldfish waste levels definitely exceed that of other freshwater varieties. The smaller the tank, the more frequently the water will need to be changed. You also need a good filtration system and an air pump. A heater for the aquarium will not be a necessity as goldfish are not as temperature sensitive as some other freshwater fish breeds.

Bi-monthly (every other week) water changes are important; the first time you may want to siphon about 25% of the water, the next time and subsequent changes, about half of the water should be good. Now if you are thinking of just pouring that dirty fish water down the drain, take a tip from my brother-in-law who has raised goldfish longer than I have. The bacteria present in fish waste laden water will make great plant fertilizer if you have a garden in progress. Even for a few houseplants, the soil will get a much-needed boost. When you replace the removed water with clean (chlorine-free; no instant from the tap kind of water) be sure to also change the filter cartridge as well.

You should (and will) enjoy your pet goldfish for a long time to come if you remember all the important points made earlier. Goldfish are attractive, not difficult to care for, and quite inexpensive (depending on whether you are looking at common or fancy varieties.) Four “common” goldfish from a pet store retailer set me back only a dollar. “Fancy” goldfish start at a dollar apiece and up from there depending on the type. They will pay you back in dividends as you see how big these little guys will get eventually! I have a four-incher that you would never guess was once two inches long so I hope it doesn’t get any bigger. I consider this particular goldfish the “alpha male” or the “Queen Bee” of my bunch.

If you ever want to take this hobby to the next level one day, you might want to look into garden fish ponds. A lot of work goes into crafting the dream backyard goldfish pond-much more than tank-keeping-so keep that in mind. Until then though, I hope you will get the maximum benefit from raising your goldfish to be happy and healthy in a nice home aquarium!

If you would like to learn more about goldfish and other helpful information on fishkeeping in general: [http://jennifersanimalworld.com/pet-goldfish-the-good-the-little-bad-and-the-beautiful/]Pet Goldfish be sure to visit [http://jennifersanimalworld.com/]Jennifer’s Animal World for more information!

Article Source: [http://EzineArticles.com/?The-Fun-and-Rewarding-Hobby-of-Keeping-Pet-Goldfish&id=8962883] The Fun and Rewarding Hobby of Keeping Pet Goldfish

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