Professional Japanese Breeders Reveal their Secrets (Part 2)

If you visit the well-known koi breeders in the mountains of Niigata Prefecture, you will notice how they fly the flags of some famous Japanese food manufacturers on their farms. If you think about how much food a koi farm with 500 natural ponds requires, or like the Marusei koi farm with almost 1000 natural ponds, you’ll soon be asking yourself how they can afford it! The Marusei koi farm, for example, requires about 3000 kg of koi food per month. The food referenced on just one of the prettily coloured flags costs a koi enthusiast around €20 per kg. This results in monthly food costs of €60,000. Assuming Marusei is sponsored so only pays half of this, it would still be €30,000, which makes about €360,000 per year.

Talking to us in a personal context several breeders said that they mostly only feed cheap food for the masses of juvenile fish, and later change over to expensive food for the koi they select from a size of about 20-30 cm upwards! Should you ever visit the breeders, take a look behind the buildings. There you will see the empty food sacks and you will quickly see how much "expensive" food and how much "cheap" food is really being fed! Who’d have thought it!

© 03.06.2020

More about this topic for you

Professional Japanese Breeders Reveal their Secrets (Part 1):

The well-known kujaku breeder Yasuaki Kaneko’s father started koi breeding because a customer couldn’t pay cash for his car repair and brought him five koi as a salary. He learned diligently from the other koi breeders in the Ojiya area and became better and better.

Read more
Heiko Blessin
Heiko Blessin
Dipl.-Biologe

Tauchen, Fotografie, Aquaristik, Haie, Motorrad

Comments

Information and consent to cookies & third-party content

We use technically necessary cookies/tools to offer, operate and secure this service. Furthermore ,with your express consent , we use cookies/tools for marketing, tracking, creating personalised content on third-party sites and for displaying third-party content on our website. You can revoke your consent at any time with effect for the future via the menu item ‘Cookie settings’.
By clicking on ‘Allow all’, you give us your express consent to the use of cookies/tools to improve the quality and performance of our service, for functional and personalised performance optimisation, to measure the effectiveness of our ads or campaigns, for personalised content for marketing purposes, including outside our website. This enables us to provide personalised online ads and extended analysis options about your user behaviour. This also includes accessing and storing data on your device. You can revoke your consent at any time with effect for the future via the menu item ‘Cookie settings’.
You can use the ‘Change settings’ button to grant and revoke individual consent to the cookies/tools and receive further information on the cookies/tools we use, their purposes and duration.
By clicking on ‘Only absolutely necessary’, only technically necessary cookies/tools are used.

Our data protection declaration tells you how we process personal data and what purposes we use the data processing for.

PUSH messages from JBL

What are PUSH messages? As part of the W3C standard, web notifications define an API for end-user notifications that are sent to the user's desktop and/or mobile devices via the browser. Notifications appear on the end devices as they are familiar to the end user from apps installed on the device (e.g. emails). Notifications appear on the end user’s device, just like an app (e.g. for emails) installed on the device.

These notifications enable a website operator to contact its users whenever they have a browser open - it doesn’t matter whether the user is currently visiting the website or not.

To be able to send web push notifications, all you need is a website with a web push code installed. This allows brands without apps to take advantage of many of the benefits of push notifications (personalised real-time communications at just the right moment).

Web notifications are part of the W3C standard and define an API for end user notifications. A notification makes it possible to inform the user about an event, such as a new blog post, outside the context of a website.

JBL GmbH & Co. KG provides this service free of charge, and it is easy to activate or deactivate.