ANDERSON — Aquamarine, orange, purple and white, inch-long Betta fish danced in small containers stacked in tiers during the Midwest Betta Club’s Spring Show on Saturday at Hollywood Estates Clubhouse in Anderson.
“It takes my stress away,” said Mohan Balakrishnan, 37, of Sterling Heights, Mich. “It’s one way of getting my stress out. I’d call them ‘beauty and the beast.’ Originally they were raised for fighting.”
Balakrishnan, a computer analyst for AAA, won best-of-show in the overall female class. A native of India, and U.S. resident for about a decade, he said he’s been raising the fish since he was a child, but only started competitively showing his Bettas for about the last two years.
“Right from the beginning, we always had fish in the house,” Balakrishnan said. “But what attracted me to Betta is the challenge of breeding them. To raise them to show-quality, you have to spend several hours a day with them.”
Tracy Benson, chairwoman for Saturday’s show, said this was the third year the club held the event in Anderson. There were more than 300 entrants, and about 20 people attended. Most of the entries were mailed to the show.
“They get bagged up and they’ll do fine,” Benson said, “as long as they stay wet. They come in from Arizona, California, Florida, Michigan, Chicago.
“There are people who have hundreds to thousands in their homes.”
Dan Young, Midwest Betta Club president and show judge, said the hobby is popular because fish need little space and they are hardy yet attractive.
“The color,” Young said of why people are drawn to Betta. “Their beauty, obviously. They’re feisty. They have a lot of flair. It’s not something where you need a lot of money to keep them.”
But big bucks can be spent. Saturday’s event also included an auction, and both Young and Benson said some fish, which live for a few years, can sell for as high as several hundred dollars each.
“Which is a lot for a small fish with a short life and not guaranteed breeding capacity,” Young said. “It’s like anything else. People want the best. It’s all relative to what it is.”
Local Business
Tanks for the good times: Fish expo in Anderson
- Local Business
-
-
Bus route expanding to include Flagship
The city is preparing to help transport workers to the Flagship Industrial Park — which should see an increase of about 500 jobs this year — by expanding its bus service to southwest Anderson.
-
History: Lapel Telephone Co. was talk of town
In November 1962, when the Lapel Telephone Co. was sold to United Utilities by the children of founder Earl Tull, a Madison County era ended.
-
Fire fighting, business coexist in heart of Anderson developer
Dave Cravens' latest development project is 5,600 square feet of retail space at 4131 S. Scatterfield Road that he calls Raven Plaza.
-
Business Briefs: May 27
A compilation of business news items of local interest as published in the Sunday edition of The Herald Bulletin.
-
'Big Joe' Clark: Problem isn’t the cost of education, but its quality
We must spend less time focusing on how to bring the price of an education down and more time figuring out how to bring up the quality of that education.
-
Boxes outside Aldi catch fire
A small fire outside the Aldi grocery store in Anderson caused an evacuation of shoppers and employees.
-
Remy to build Chinese manufacturing plant
Remy International Inc. plans to build a manufacturing plant and engineering center in Wuhan, China, company executives announced in Chicago earlier this week.
-
Susan Miller: Looking for a summer vacation vocation
Summer vacation is often a synonym for summer vocation, particularly for teenagers.
-
Frankton woman will be on online car ad
Tina Collins giggled as she sped around the track in a go-kart at Applewood Raceway. Her son, Owen Foit, 18, smiled broadly as he threatened to pass her while her daughter, Tarah Collins, 14, tried to catch up from behind.
-
Senate candidate visits Alexandria ethanol plant
In his first post-primary visit to Madison County on Wednesday, Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Joe Donnelly visited the Poet Biorefining plant here to underscore his support for energy independence and Indiana corn farmers.
- More Local Business Headlines
-
Bus route expanding to include Flagship


