Browning Knives Red
Merchandise & Articles
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Browning Knives 182 Trapper Pocket Knife with Red Jigged Bone Handles $14.99 Browning Knives – Trapper Pocket Knife with Red Jigged Bone Handles: Model BR-182. 4″ closed. Stainless clip and spey blades. Red pick bone handles with nickel silver bolsters and Browning inlay shield…. |
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Browning Knives 184 Congress Pocket Knife with Red Jigged Bone Handles $14.99 Browning Knives – Congress Pocket Knife with Red Jigged Bone Handles: Model BR-184. 3 1/2″ closed. Stainless blades. Red pick bone handles with nickel silver bolsters and Browning inlay shield…. |
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Browning Red Jigged Bone 4 Blade Congress Knife NIB $12.99 |
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BROWNING BR363 BLACK LIGHTING RED BONE A/O LINERL KNIFE $44.95 |
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Browning Red Jigged Bone 4 Blade Congress Knife NIB $12.99 |
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NEW BROWNING KNIFE 322182 TRAPPER 2 BLADE RED BONE $4.99 |
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Browning Escalade. 3 3/4″ Knife Red Wood Handle $132.57 |
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Browning Red BoneCongress. 3 1/2″ Knife $35.66 |
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Browning Red BoneTrapper. 4″ Knife $35.66 |
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Browning Red Bone Stockman. 3 7/8″ Knife $35.66 |
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BROWNING KNIFE 322182 TRAPPER 2 BLADE RED BONE NIB $20.00 |
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Browning Red Bone Congress Pocket Knife BR184 Great Gif $13.99 |
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Browning Red Pick BoneTrapper BR182 KNIFE $17.49 |
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Browning Red Pick BoneCongress BR184 KNIFE $17.49 |
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BROWNING RED BONE TRAPPER KNIFE $15.99 |
Brown knife fish with ich? Help?
So I bought two pink kissing gouramis a couple weeks ago, and I didn’t know one of them had ich until about a week after I had it. The ich spread to the two brown knife fish that were already in my tank, and to the other gourami. The gourami that had it originally died yesterday, though I’ve put medications in the tank (yes, I followed directions correctly). I just found out today that I’m lucky my knifes are still alive, as they don’t handle medication well. I also have two snails (which I took out for to medication), two senegal bichirs, a red tiger barb, a striped tiger barb (the pet store didn’t have anything on the label except for “tiger barb,” so I just call it that), a striped raphael catfish, and a pleco, all in my 20 gallon. (It may seem overcrowded, but they each do their own thing except for the barbs, and sometimes the bichirs and knifes). Only the gourami and the knifes are showing signs of ich; the others may have it but I’m not sure. Help??
Holy crap. Your tank does not “seem overcrowded” it is so overstocked I’m literally sitting here slack-jawed. Kissing gouramis need about 55 gallons for a pair. Brown knifes can grow up to 12 inches (though 8 is more common in an aquarium) and also need about 55 gallons just for one. The fact that you have barbs, catfish, a pleco (which if it’s common will grow up to two feet and need a ridiculously large tank), and birchirs is just absurd. If you do not work on rehoming your fish immediately, you are going to start having serious fish loss. Your tank has a serious ich problem because your fish are stressed out, poisoned by toxic water, have no immune system, and very vulnerable to infection.
I’m serious that if you continue this tank arrangement, you are killing your fish.
As for the immediate problem, apparently QuICK Cure can often work to cure ich from scaleless fish like the knife fish. Increase the temperature in the tank 2-4 degrees to speed up the life cycle of the parasite. It is only vulnerable to medication in one stage, and this helps it get there faster. The increased temperature can also help your fish fight it off. Remove your carbon filter. Treat according to directions for the entire course of treatment, which can easily be two weeks. Don’t quit early because you see signs of improvement.
Also purchase a water testing kit and test your water every single day. You will most likely need huge water changes, probably around 50% every day, to keep your water parameters vaguely livable. You ideally want ammonia and nitrite at zero and nitrate at 40 ppm. That will be next to impossible in your tank, but keep all parameters as low as you possibly can. Every time you do a water change it dilutes the medication, so if it calls for daily medication, do the water change first and then add the medication.

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