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floating plants
I have a small (250 gallon) pond, with an approximately 10 gallon upper
pond, that feeds water down a waterfall into the main pond. In the past I have used water hyacinths in the upper pond to "strain' the water, and it has worked well. Are there other floating plants that could be used in the same way - just for a little variety? |
floating plants
"pete" wrote in message ... I have a small (250 gallon) pond, with an approximately 10 gallon upper pond, that feeds water down a waterfall into the main pond. In the past I have used water hyacinths in the upper pond to "strain' the water, and it has worked well. Are there other floating plants that could be used in the same way - just for a little variety? =============================== Water lettuce is nice. I use it in my settling tank. They get huge. -- Carol.... "How come wrong numbers are never busy?" ~~~~~~{@ "They laugh because I'm different, I laugh because they're all the same." http://www.heartoftn.net/users/windsong/index.html ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
floating plants
"~ Windsong ~" wrote in message ... "pete" wrote in message ... I have a small (250 gallon) pond, with an approximately 10 gallon upper pond, that feeds water down a waterfall into the main pond. In the past I have used water hyacinths in the upper pond to "strain' the water, and it has worked well. Are there other floating plants that could be used in the same way - just for a little variety? =============================== Water lettuce is nice. I use it in my settling tank. They get huge. snip The WH are the better plant for filtering. The roots are much denser then the lettuce, but the lettuce are a close second. Ingrid has had great success with water celery. That would work too. Watercress is cheap, and also grows very dense in moving water. BV. |
floating plants
American spongeplant, aka frog's-bit (Limnobium spongia). I find it
to be as effective as waterhyacinth or waterlettuce in nutrient abatement, more attractive, and am especially fond of the fact that it is native (and legal) in my area (Texas). Added bonus: it overwinters just fine in north Texas, and begins work outcompeting algae about a month earlier than the exotics. "pete" wrote: I have a small (250 gallon) pond, with an approximately 10 gallon upper pond, that feeds water down a waterfall into the main pond. In the past I have used water hyacinths in the upper pond to "strain' the water, and it has worked well. Are there other floating plants that could be used in the same way - just for a little variety? |
floating plants
GD wrote in message . ..
American spongeplant, aka frog's-bit (Limnobium spongia). I find it to be as effective as waterhyacinth or waterlettuce in nutrient abatement, more attractive, and am especially fond of the fact that it is native (and legal) in my area (Texas). Added bonus: it overwinters just fine in north Texas, and begins work outcompeting algae about a month earlier than the exotics. GD I'm in the Dallas area and am interested in where I can obtain the American spongeplant. Any suggestions? As you say, everything else is illegal. |
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