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#1
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Hi, folks......
Just now setting up a new freshwater tank, after many many years being away from the hobby. Years ago, I had found and picked up some wild aquatic grasses and taken them home to my freshwater tank; those plants flourished for years in that tank with no harmful effects on my fishies. I'd like to plant wild plants again, and I would appreciate you folk's feedback as to whether that's a bad idea, and if so, why........ There are some nice tall aquatic grasses and lilly-like plants growing in a stream just around the corner from my house, some interesting-looking moss-like growth, too. Any ideas, folks??? Thanks, Greg |
#2
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![]() Well odds are yur gonna get told they may have problematic critters and other pathogenic crap on them....I say thats bull****. One garss thatfdoes exceptionally well is mondo grass. Its a shrt (3" blades or so) dark green about 3/32" wide bladed grass mainly used around flower beds and such. Its available at most all garden cneters,a nd it gorws just fine totally submerged in an aquarium. I have approximatley 1/2 of a 60 gal tank planted with this mondo grass now for about 4 years...........looks super and it does not get weedly or leggy looking either.....When its planted right it looks like a fresh cut narrow blade blue grass lawn does. Anothe rgood cheap plant is a common onion bulb, they grow just fine fully submerged. Get small onion or scallion bulbs. I hace a stand of them ina 20 gal tall tank that is just dense in its foilage and it makes a perfect place for bubble nest builders etc to hide in the tops, which flaot on the water yet the mid andlower column of the ppants remain relatively open.. One thing yu can fdo is if yu afraid something may be contaminated iwth undesirebales is to buy some poitassium permangante at the local big box store in the pond section, such as lowes and home depot has. Use a 2% solutiion of the stuff and soak the plants in it for about a half day or so, and any possible pathogens and junk is oxidized and should not present any problems. Yu can place the plants directly in the PP solution and then rinse in clean water before final planting in display tank. On 21 Jun 2006 16:48:24 -0700, wrote: Hi, folks...... Just now setting up a new freshwater tank, after many many years being away from the hobby. Years ago, I had found and picked up some wild aquatic grasses and taken them home to my freshwater tank; those plants flourished for years in that tank with no harmful effects on my fishies. I'd like to plant wild plants again, and I would appreciate you folk's feedback as to whether that's a bad idea, and if so, why........ There are some nice tall aquatic grasses and lilly-like plants growing in a stream just around the corner from my house, some interesting-looking moss-like growth, too. Any ideas, folks??? Thanks, Greg -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#4
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"Altum" wrote in news:1150935666.484145.179650
@y41g2000cwy.googlegroups.com: gave me some cuttings. I've got a floating, elodea-like plant and some That's probably Elodea canadensis... it's all over the place at the cottage and in most lakes, bays, and beaches. It's not a true floating plant--as it has true roots not rhizoids--but it survives very well floating. Keep in mind that collecting wild plants from public waterways is probably illegal, so have a look around for any wildlife officials before you start harvesting. These laws are in place to prevent the commercial exploitation of native wildlife so no one is going to raise a fuss unless you start selling it. |
#5
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dc wrote:
"Altum" wrote in news:1150935666.484145.179650 @y41g2000cwy.googlegroups.com: gave me some cuttings. I've got a floating, elodea-like plant and some That's probably Elodea canadensis... it's all over the place at the cottage and in most lakes, bays, and beaches. It's not a true floating plant--as it has true roots not rhizoids--but it survives very well floating. You got me curious. The plant has leaflets in threes like Elodea canadensis but the leaves and stems are much thinner. The plant also branches a lot more. The bit I put outside has branched at almost every axil. I think it's Elodea nuttallii(Planchon), known as western waterweed or Nuttall's waterweed. -- Come join us in a friendly, on-topic fish and pond forum: http://groups.google.com/group/The-Freshwater-Aquarium Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
#6
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I'm Roy and post as Köi-Lö so everyone killfils the bitch.
On 21 Jun 2006 16:48:24 -0700, wrote: Hi, folks...... Just now setting up a new freshwater tank, after many many years being away from the hobby. Years ago, I had found and picked up some wild aquatic grasses and taken them home to my freshwater tank; those plants flourished for years in that tank with no harmful effects on my fishies. I'd like to plant wild plants again, and I would appreciate you folk's feedback as to whether that's a bad idea, and if so, why........ There are some nice tall aquatic grasses and lilly-like plants growing in a stream just around the corner from my house, some interesting-looking moss-like growth, too. Any ideas, folks??? Thanks, Greg -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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