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#1
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Well not too many people posted to my last question, but thank you to
the three who did ![]() plants at Walmart and home depot as someone suggested, and I now realize that the plants are not in "water", but soil ![]() take these plants and shake all the soil off then put in my pond? It seems they would die? I did find a list of plants to try. Also what can I use as "soil", pond soil is very exspensive, 6.47 for a small bag? I also have just a few questions about my filter, what else might a place like home depot call a Bulkhead fitting? I just couldn't find it, maybe this is the wrong kind of store?? The person I asked said that he hadn't heard of it?? And I didn't see anything there like the online picture. About the lava rock, I got a bag of this today and it's very small like gravel, and very heavy? It's the only one they had, but I'm not sure how this would stay out of the sediment area of the filter? Sorry for the confusion, but I'm very new to this and have no clue when it comes to pond plants. Ouida |
#2
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![]() "Ann505" wrote in message oups.com... Well not too many people posted to my last question, but thank you to the three who did ![]() plants at Walmart and home depot as someone suggested, and I now realize that the plants are not in "water", but soil ![]() take these plants and shake all the soil off then put in my pond? ## Which plants? Most need to be in soil or finer gravel to thrive. What would hold them up and in place if you just dropped them into your pond? It seems they would die? I did find a list of plants to try. Also what can I use as "soil", pond soil is very exspensive, 6.47 for a small bag? ## Any good garden soil not to loaded with organic matter. I use the soil from behind our house. It's a red clay and the plants thrive in it. I only fertilize my water lilies. I also have just a few questions about my filter, what else might a place like home depot call a Bulkhead fitting? I just couldn't find it, maybe this is the wrong kind of store?? The person I asked said that he hadn't heard of it?? And I didn't see anything there like the online picture. ## Try ACE Hardware or any farm type of store. About the lava rock, I got a bag of this today and it's very small like gravel, and very heavy? It's the only one they had, but I'm not sure how this would stay out of the sediment area of the filter? ## That's the wrong size. You need the lava rock that's 1 to 2"s. Sorry for the confusion, but I'm very new to this and have no clue when it comes to pond plants. Ouida ## Google is your friend. There are hundreds of pages out there that cover all kinds of water/pond plants. :-) -- McKoi.... the frugal ponder... My Pond Page http://tinyurl.com/cuq5b ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o http://www.hyphenologist.co.uk/killf..._troll_faq.htm |
#3
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Yes I have been learning a lot more about pond plants, but it seems
some of the (I Guess) most basic things are hard to find. Or should I be more honest and say the time to google can be hard to find. Thank you very much for your response, I thought this aquatic garden soil was much different for potting soil. Now I still would want to put the plants in pond planters, that look like strainer baskets, right? Again thanks, Ouida. |
#4
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A few things I've learned from the group....
if you are planting plants in the pond, you can put soil in if you choose, but what also seems to work well, is just putting some rocks on top of the bulb, or around the plant to anchor in it the pot. You can use regular plastic pots, or the "screen" type.. each work well. The planst will grow like crazy though, and when you remove them for splitting them, you'll have to cut the pot off around the roots. I prefer black or dark green plastic pots, because they cannot be seen in the water for the most part. Lava rock is a PITA to clean... if you must use bought bagged rock, use smooth stream washed rocks.. they are easy to clean. Think rocks that'll fit in the palm of your hand. To get some plants in the ater right away, go to the grocery store, and buy some watercress, and just dump it in the pond.. no preparation is needed. If it's cheap by you, buy enough to cover like 1/4 of your pond's surface.. if not, just let it grow some. Most places are at the end of the growing season, stock wise. My local walmart will no teven be getting any more topsoil in until next year! Finding pond plants will be har dbecause of this. Many people in the group have plants going crazy, and will gladly ship you some for the cost of postage.. water lettuce, and water hyacynth are the ones that will grow the fastest. And if you are still building the pond, build it twice the size you think you want.. otherwise next year, you'll be increasing it's size. You'll always want more and more, and larger ponds are easier to maintain then tiny ones. Hope some of this helps! -- Gareee© (Gary Tabar Jr.) Gareee's Homepage: http://www.fortunecity.com/tattooine.../mainframe.htm |
#5
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![]() "Ann505" wrote in message oups.com... Yes I have been learning a lot more about pond plants, but it seems some of the (I Guess) most basic things are hard to find. Or should I be more honest and say the time to google can be hard to find. Thank you very much for your response, I thought this aquatic garden soil was much different for potting soil. Now I still would want to put the plants in pond planters, that look like strainer baskets, right? Again thanks, Ouida. ======================== I only use those pond pots for my water lilies. I use regular cheapo plastic pots (with drainage holes in the bottom) for all the other pond plants. I place a piece of plastic from an old grocery bag on the bottom to help keep the soil from leaking out underwater. I cover the soil with about 1" of any size gravel for the same purpose. The only plant that really wants fertilizer other than my lilies are the arrowheads and the lotus. -- McKoi.... the frugal ponder... My Pond Page http://tinyurl.com/cuq5b ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#6
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![]() "Ann505" wrote in message oups.com... Well not too many people posted to my last question, but thank you to the three who did ![]() plants at Walmart and home depot as someone suggested, and I now realize that the plants are not in "water", but soil ![]() take these plants and shake all the soil off then put in my pond? It seems they would die? I did find a list of plants to try. Also what can I use as "soil", pond soil is very exspensive, 6.47 for a small bag? I also have just a few questions about my filter, what else might a place like home depot call a Bulkhead fitting? I just couldn't find it, maybe this is the wrong kind of store?? The person I asked said that he hadn't heard of it?? And I didn't see anything there like the online picture. About the lava rock, I got a bag of this today and it's very small like gravel, and very heavy? It's the only one they had, but I'm not sure how this would stay out of the sediment area of the filter? Sorry for the confusion, but I'm very new to this and have no clue when it comes to pond plants. Ouida Here is a link to an online source of bulkhead fittings: http://www.watergardengems.com/pvc/bulkheads.html Pond plants will come in "soil", usually heavy clay soil. If it is in potting soil, you want to remove it from this soil, clean it, and re-plant it in heavy clay (you can use bentonite clay if you have access to a cheap supply - well drillers supply companies and industrial pump companies usually will sell you a 100 lbs bag for about $7.00). Others here will no doubt provide more detailed information than I can right now. As for the lava rock, I'm not sure what you are trying to do with it, unless you plan to use it for a filter substrate. I don't know how your system is set up, so I can't answer your guestion. |
#7
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Thank you very much. I will look for some watercress as soon as my pond
is up and running. It should be up this weekend. That's just what I needed, some ideas to get me started ![]() performed (with 30gal veggie filter), I had a bigger one but never put plants in it. We had to remove it when my daughter started to walk. I only had it for a year or so and it was never really finished. So I am hoping this pond will get hubby excited to dig a bigger one, again. LOL |
#8
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On 10 Aug 2005 09:33:37 -0700, "Ann505"
wrote: Well not too many people posted to my last question, but thank you to the three who did ![]() plants at Walmart and home depot as someone suggested, and I now realize that the plants are not in "water", but soil ![]() take these plants and shake all the soil off then put in my pond? It seems they would die? I did find a list of plants to try. Also what can I use as "soil", pond soil is very exspensive, 6.47 for a small bag? I also have just a few questions about my filter, what else might a place like home depot call a Bulkhead fitting? I just couldn't find it, maybe this is the wrong kind of store?? The person I asked said that he hadn't heard of it?? And I didn't see anything there like the online picture. About the lava rock, I got a bag of this today and it's very small like gravel, and very heavy? It's the only one they had, but I'm not sure how this would stay out of the sediment area of the filter? Sorry for the confusion, but I'm very new to this and have no clue when it comes to pond plants. Ouida In addition to what others have posted, the "Pond Soil" you saw sold is something I posted about here some time ago. People responded that it can destroy a pump, so be very careful with it. We just use dirt, clean dirt, no toxics added that we know of. |
#9
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#10
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![]() Ann505 wrote: snip Or should I be more honest and say the time to google can be hard to find. snip Careful. Some folks might get offended that you don't have time to do the research but have the time for them to do it for you. Look up some water garden web sites. A lot of them have the information you are looking for. Go to a book store or library and find a book on water gardening. Find the time to read them. I found time a few years back when I took a few books to read on a plane flight to Hawaii. I know it's not easy sometimes as work, kids, pets, TEENS and etc. are always wanting a piece of your time. But the information on the basics is out there and it's allot easier to get it all in one place than piece by piece from us. After that, it's all about what works best in your particular situation. After all, we don't all live in the same zones. |
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