Developing
a koi from a baby to a show winning adult is a long and challenging
journey. The challenges faced during this journey are what make many
of us tick. It is just plain exciting! How good can we be? How many
mistakes can we avoid? What must we do to head off problems before they
begin? How good can the koi we have searched for and chosen become?
These are just some of the questions that keep us on our toes and moving
forward.
A koi's development
is influenced by many, many factors. One of the most important of these
factors is the environment the koi is raised in over the years. We all
know that butterfly koi, common pond koi, & comets are very strong
and can tolerate a wide range of water conditions, but because of the
years of refinement through breeding the highest quality koi can be
quite a bit more fragile. To keep high quality koi healthy and happy
you have to be up on your water quality. To develop and improve high
quality koi your water quality has to be pristine and stay that way
from day to day and year to year. This is a hard concept to fully grasp
until you have visited a pond with truly good water. The koi look beautiful
and stout, the skin shines, and the colors glow.
Water Quality parameters for:
1.
Wide (keeping butterfly koi, common koi, & goldfish}
2.
Narrow (keeping high quality koi)
3.
Extremely Narrow (developing and improving high quality koi)
PH = 7.0 to 7.6 & constant
Hardness = 50 to 180 ppm
Alkalinity = 120 to 180 ppm
Water Temperature = constant - no shifts of more than 4 degrees F. in
24 hours
Dissolved Oxygen = at or near saturation (14
ppm) at all times
Ammonia, Nitrites or Nitrates should be at 0
ppm at all times.
Contaminants such as lead, copper, chlorine,
iron, & residual medications should be kept to a minimum.
Developing koi need
good nutrition. Conformation & body shape are the most important
factors in show koi. The first four years are critical in a koi's skeletal
structure and bone development. As with most animals Mother Nature has
chosen egg and sperm production as the first priority for nutrition
in koi. She builds the eggs first. Growth becomes the second priority,
and color development (as we like it) becomes the third priority. Many
of us know this concept, but we should think about what this really
means when we are trying to develop a koi into a champion. Developing
a koi is a long process that should be approached with a game plan and
lots of patience. A prospective Grand Champion should be chosen for
it's merits and potential, then grown out to it's maximum size first,
(about 6 to 8 years) then it should be colored up and polished up (about
1 year) in a finishing pond. You can quickly see we are now fighting
Mother Nature's plan. If a koi is spending all of its energy replacing
eggs that leaves little energy for growth. So, to have things go the
way we want we should prevent our future grand champion from spawning
during the spring and summer months to maximize growth. Keeping male
and female koi separate from March to September generally does this.
If you can understand the impact of Mother Nature's priorities versus
your own priorities for your koi you have come a long way toward understanding
basic koi development. This order of growing out the koi first, then
concentrating on the koi's colors is practiced by the best breeders
in Japan and is understood by the most successful hobbyists. But it
seems to frighten and confuse most American & European koi hobbyists.
How can a koi that ugly cost so much? This is only because we haven't
been exposed to young jumbo koi in the early stages of their development.
When we see a Jumbo Champion we see it in it's finished show ready state
either at a show or in a magazine where it has been photographed in
the right light and the best angle. Koi shows are a great place to learn
about koi, but since the koi in a show are being judged on how they
look right now koi shows are not the best place to learn more about
how koi develop. For crash courses in koi development regular visits
to koi breeders, whether in America, Japan, or South Africa, will give
you an opportunity to view True tategoi, high quality koi that are still
developing and are not yet for sale.
Since koi are always
changing as they grow and develop words and phrases like finished, tategoi,
and over the hill become confusing. Let's take the baby Sanke in the
photo as an example. With a Sanke we are dealing with three colors,
white, black, and red. These three colors are all developing at different
rates, even the white matures and thickens. This is one of the factors
that make great Sankes so difficult to produce and to find. There is
a point in this Sanke's growth and development when this fish will look
it's best - the point where all three colors are working together. This
ideal point may be when the Sanke is 2 months old, 2 years old, or 10
years old. Experienced koi keepers can predict this time fairly accurately,
but the breeder of the koi has the ultimate advantage. He or she can
compare the koi to its parents and it's siblings from previous spawns.
This is one area where hobbyists in America are at a disadvantage. Hobbyists
don't often have access to the koi breeder and because of the importing
system and language barriers they generally can't get accurate information
on the koi they have purchased. When will this Sanke look it's very
best? Will it be a year from now? Will it be five years from now? Or
has that time already come and gone?
With the Kohakus in
the photo we are only dealing with two colors so the timing of the color
development is not as much of an issue. The Kohaku will be ready for
shows when the red has finished. If the red finishes early the koi will
simply be shown in smaller classes and will most likely not be eligible
for Grand Champion.
If we compare the five
Kohakus in the bowl since they are all from the same spawn we can assume
that the largest baby will grow to be the largest adult. It has the
good even orangy shade of Hi that will develop slowly into an elegant
shade of red, but I have found over the past few seasons that some of
the smaller siblings may pass this koi in growth over the next growing
season. This time next year one of the other koi may be the largest
in the bowl. So how do we choose the Kohaku out of this bowl with the
best potential to become a Grand Champion? They are all from the same
spawn; the color, edging, and overall quality are very similar. We could
go back to conformation, but the body shapes are all very similar and
good. We can now choose pattern, but which one has the ideal pattern?
Patterns are so subjective.
Four of the five have no obvious flaws right now. The Kohaku at the
bottom has a little red running down past the eye, but this will become
less of a factor as the head grows and the red moves up. So given they
are all fairly equal we choose the one we like the best, the one we
get excited about, the koi we would like to work with for the next few
years.
Looking at this photo
of baby koi brings us to the most important aspect of understanding
koi development. You need to know as much as you can about the koi you
have chosen to grow into a champion. How old is the koi... in months.
This will tell you how many growing seasons the koi has been through.
This is very important in determining how large the koi will grow. If
the koi is eight inches long but has been through two growing seasons
(a growing season is April through October) it is not going to be a
big koi, but it may be a great candidate for Baby or Young Grand Champion,
a shorter-term project. This is where Japanese words like Tosai, Nisai,
& Sansai become confusing to us. Ask for the koi's exact age in
months. You need to know this accurately to be able to determine the
future potential of the koi. What are the parents like? Are they large?
What bloodline are they bred from? What do their siblings look like?
How does this line of koi develop? Slow? Fast? I am finding that after
I have culled down to the best 100 koi from a spawn, the babies look
like their parents and develop like their parents. Patterns are random,
but they aren't totally random. Certain angles and shapes will appear
over and over again. The shape of the head and back will follow that
of the parents. When breeders and hobbyists talk of bloodlines this
is what they are speaking about. There are certain characteristics that
appear over and over, season after season. It may be a certain shade
of Hi, it may be the shape of the sumi patches, it may be the shape
of the koi's face. Hobbyists will tend to develop an aesthetic taste
for a certain type and shape of koi. This is one of the things that
make certain breeders so popular. Their koi have a certain trademark
characteristic that just looks good! Knowing the parents helps you predict
the future of your koi. This is what allows Japanese hobbyists to buy
what we think are very ugly expensive young koi with confidence. They
don't lose any sleep over it, in fact they have sweet dreams. They know
the quality is there and it will show itself in time.
I have noticed the
koi keepers who have been in the hobby the longest seem to be the most
enthusiastic. I think it is because they know they are really just getting
started. To me developing a koi to it's fullest potential is an incredible
and exciting challenge that requires a great deal of patience and understanding.
There is so much to learn and so many ways to do it right or wrong whether
you are a breeder or a hobbyist. There are very few ways to make a bad
koi good, but so many ways to make a good koi bad. The next time you
find yourself gazing down at a koi that's been crowned Grand Champion
regress a little and imagine what this koi looked like at one, two,
or three years old, is
it a koi you would have chosen? Now imagine the journey this koi has
taken to become a Grand Champion. Take note of the fact it is 8 years
old and has no scars and the fins are all perfect. Take note that it
is 30 inches long and has the youthful skin and color of a 3 year old
male. Someone with great handling skill, a great eye for koi, a great
understanding of water quality, and an incredible enthusiasm for koi
keeping developed this koi from a fish egg to a Grand Champion. Patience
Grasshopper!