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#1
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I decided at the last minute to bring my Koi inside for the winter. I
saved only 1 pond plant. In Chicago, you can't easily find water plants in the winter other than submersibles (anacharis) at the pet store. Are there any common houseplants I could buy that will do well submersed in water? |
#2
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MC wrote:
I decided at the last minute to bring my Koi inside for the winter. I saved only 1 pond plant. In Chicago, you can't easily find water plants in the winter other than submersibles (anacharis) at the pet store. Are there any common houseplants I could buy that will do well submersed in water? The Peace Lily does very well. I have one in my indoor goldfish pond. -- Bonnie NJ |
#3
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Also, heart leaf philodendron and Arrowhead, both come in varigated or
solid green varieties. Aquatic palm plants do well inside, as does bog lilies and Imperial Taro, so you might want to pick those up for the outside pond next year and bring them in with the koi. I think Ingrid does this with quite a few of her veggie filter plants. ~ jan MC wrote: I decided at the last minute to bring my Koi inside for the winter. I saved only 1 pond plant. In Chicago, you can't easily find water plants in the winter other than submersibles (anacharis) at the pet store. Are there any common houseplants I could buy that will do well submersed in water? The Peace Lily does very well. I have one in my indoor goldfish pond. bonnie See jan's ponds thru the seasons and/or my filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Defrosted~ Tri-Cities, WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#4
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Why do you want them to be submersed? If you want plants to use the fish
waste there are many house plants that will do well in water. Just about any plant that has surface roots or any plant that you would stick in a jar of water to root. I currently have a arrowhead plant (syngonium podophyllum) stuck in my patio water garden that I pulled inside and it has been doing fine for some time now (far better than the poor water hyacynths). To oxygenate I would think that it would be easier to just add a bubbler IMO..... DKat "MC" wrote in message om... I decided at the last minute to bring my Koi inside for the winter. I saved only 1 pond plant. In Chicago, you can't easily find water plants in the winter other than submersibles (anacharis) at the pet store. Are there any common houseplants I could buy that will do well submersed in water? |
#5
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I have a airstone. The plants are to reduce the nitrates which I can't
seem to keep down even with a lot of filtration. "D Kat" wrote in message . net... Why do you want them to be submersed? If you want plants to use the fish waste there are many house plants that will do well in water. Just about any plant that has surface roots or any plant that you would stick in a jar of water to root. I currently have a arrowhead plant (syngonium podophyllum) stuck in my patio water garden that I pulled inside and it has been doing fine for some time now (far better than the poor water hyacynths). To oxygenate I would think that it would be easier to just add a bubbler IMO..... DKat "MC" wrote in message om... I decided at the last minute to bring my Koi inside for the winter. I saved only 1 pond plant. In Chicago, you can't easily find water plants in the winter other than submersibles (anacharis) at the pet store. Are there any common houseplants I could buy that will do well submersed in water? |
#6
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http://puregold.aquaria.net/MOH/bsmn...ie_filter.html
~ jan JJsPond.us wrote: Also, heart leaf philodendron and Arrowhead, both come in varigated or solid green varieties. Aquatic palm plants do well inside, as does bog lilies and Imperial Taro, so you might want to pick those up for the outside pond next year and bring them in with the koi. I think Ingrid does this with quite a few of her veggie filter plants. ~ jan ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#7
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exactly. anything that does well with its feet in water will do great with the
foliage outside. look for low light level plants. now the roots they come with may not do well in water, I hear that cuttings develop water roots which are different than soil roots. water cress will root fast, altho it likes more light. just keep the water moving so the plant can suck it up. Ingrid "D Kat" wrote: Why do you want them to be submersed? If you want plants to use the fish waste there are many house plants that will do well in water. "MC" wrote in message . com... I decided at the last minute to bring my Koi inside for the winter. I saved only 1 pond plant. In Chicago, you can't easily find water plants in the winter other than submersibles (anacharis) at the pet store. Are there any common houseplants I could buy that will do well submersed in water? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#8
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MC wrote:
I have a airstone. The plants are to reduce the nitrates which I can't seem to keep down even with a lot of filtration. Are you doing frequent water changes? I do them weekly. -- Bonnie NJ |
#9
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Pothos love to grow in water -- they even grow with no added fertilizer
or nitrates, just plain water. If you have a friend with a pothos plant, get tip cuttings (4-6 inches), tie together and suspend directly in your tank. They even grow in low or no natural light. If light is a problem, look for over low light plants that like moisture. Just remove them from their pots, and rinse all soil off the roots before suspending in the tank (you can cover the roots with a mesh bag or even a sock). -- Kathy aka Zk 3500gal pond, 13 pond piggies Oregon, USDA Zone 7 MC wrote: ... Are there any common houseplants I could buy that will do well submersed in water? |
#10
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![]() Plain old ivy will grow lots of roots in water. I've grown lots of them in these test tube type vases in a sunny window. Have not tried them in with critters. I notice that where ever the ivy touches the water (while growing alongside my pondsills) it will send out roots. My aquatic frogs, who live in a pondsill, (aquatic habitat that lives on a kitchen windowsill for sun) have had to be insulated lately with ovenmitts as it is sooooo cold outside that window!) ka30p http://www.geocities.com/watergarden...dors/home.html |
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