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#1
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![]() Nikki Casali wrote: wrote: I have a good experience to tell. Last friday when I got up I had some cabombas plants floating. (is there a way to have them stick to the bottom definatly?) I make a bunch of plants and wrap the stems with a lead weight. Good tip, but do you bury it or just leave it hanging at the bottom? |
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#3
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I know what you mean.
I am doing alright with it, but it just doesnt make any roots at the bottom. I usually bury it in the gravel to hold, but it either rots or the fish suck too much on it, and I have it flooting in the water. ![]() I really want that plant to develop, it is beautiful. |
#4
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wrote in message
oups.com... I know what you mean. I am doing alright with it, but it just doesnt make any roots at the bottom. I usually bury it in the gravel to hold, but it either rots or the fish suck too much on it, and I have it flooting in the water. ![]() I really want that plant to develop, it is beautiful. I wrap them in lead weight as well, but in groups of about 4 to 5 (less is too thin, more and they lose their bottom leaves), but I found that it was difficult to not damage the stems with the lead, so I first wrap the stems in a pinch of thin sponge, and then put the lead over that. Other tricks are to snip off the ends of each stem (unless they already have roots), and to be very careful to not damage the ends when planting (place them in a depression and then push substrate in to fill the hole). You can also put a small piece of fertilizer near the roots. I've seen these mentioned http://www.petmeister.com/item801.htm and Elaine is using Aquarium Pharmaceuticals Root Tabs plus Iron laterite pellets. hth -- www.NetMax.tk |
#5
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NetMax wrote:
wrote in message oups.com... I know what you mean. I am doing alright with it, but it just doesnt make any roots at the bottom. I usually bury it in the gravel to hold, but it either rots or the fish suck too much on it, and I have it flooting in the water. ![]() I really want that plant to develop, it is beautiful. I wrap them in lead weight as well, but in groups of about 4 to 5 (less is too thin, more and they lose their bottom leaves), but I found that it was difficult to not damage the stems with the lead, so I first wrap the stems in a pinch of thin sponge, and then put the lead over that. Other tricks are to snip off the ends of each stem (unless they already have roots), and to be very careful to not damage the ends when planting (place them in a depression and then push substrate in to fill the hole). You can also put a small piece of fertilizer near the roots. I've seen these mentioned http://www.petmeister.com/item801.htm and Elaine is using Aquarium Pharmaceuticals Root Tabs plus Iron laterite pellets. hth There's another good product for a few dollars by Aquarium Pharmaceuticals called Plant Plugs. They're rockwool with a stretchy netting to hold stems against the rockwool. You put the stems between the netting and rockwool or into slits in the rockwool and then you bury the whole thing in the gravel. The rockwool has fertilizer for the first couple of months to help root development and then you start using the fertilizer tabs NetMax mentioned. (Good memory, BTW!) They're the best product I've ever found to help difficult stem plants stay submerged and root - saved my otherwise impossible Rotala macrantha many years ago. -- Elaine T __ http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com |
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#7
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Elaine T wrote:
NetMax wrote: wrote in message oups.com... I know what you mean. I am doing alright with it, but it just doesnt make any roots at the bottom. I usually bury it in the gravel to hold, but it either rots or the fish suck too much on it, and I have it flooting in the water. ![]() I really want that plant to develop, it is beautiful. I wrap them in lead weight as well, but in groups of about 4 to 5 (less is too thin, more and they lose their bottom leaves), but I found that it was difficult to not damage the stems with the lead, so I first wrap the stems in a pinch of thin sponge, and then put the lead over that. Other tricks are to snip off the ends of each stem (unless they already have roots), and to be very careful to not damage the ends when planting (place them in a depression and then push substrate in to fill the hole). You can also put a small piece of fertilizer near the roots. I've seen these mentioned http://www.petmeister.com/item801.htm and Elaine is using Aquarium Pharmaceuticals Root Tabs plus Iron laterite pellets. hth There's another good product for a few dollars by Aquarium Pharmaceuticals called Plant Plugs. They're rockwool with a stretchy netting to hold stems against the rockwool. You put the stems between the netting and rockwool or into slits in the rockwool and then you bury the whole thing in the gravel. The rockwool has fertilizer for the first couple of months to help root development and then you start using the fertilizer tabs NetMax mentioned. (Good memory, BTW!) They're the best product I've ever found to help difficult stem plants stay submerged and root - saved my otherwise impossible Rotala macrantha many years ago. I got the brand wrong. They're Aquarium Products. -- Elaine T __ http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com |
#8
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On 2 May 2005 13:09:09 -0700, "
wrote: I know what you mean. I am doing alright with it, but it just doesnt make any roots at the bottom. I usually bury it in the gravel to hold, but it either rots or the fish suck too much on it, and I have it flooting in the water. ![]() I really want that plant to develop, it is beautiful. I have a 10 gallon quarantine tank with no gravel. I have found some plants do ok weighted and no gravel. A couple of times I moved the plants to a 29 gallon community tank while I had medicine in the quarantine tank. Again I let them float on the bottom only to find some planted themselves, the roots just extended from the bottom stems into the gravel. As to your pet plant, I have no specific knowledge. How about planting half of what you have and floating the other half and see what happens. Perhaps someone will have direct experience, so much nicer than making guesses. dick |
#9
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I like to let my java fern, hornwort, and wisteria float as they get
more light this way because the light is closer. The plants definitely grow more this way for me. Just my experience, later! |
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