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Can someone tell me if I am preparing this sal****er driftwood properly for
a fresh water tank?? 1) Boil repeatedly and change water until water stays clear 2) soak in bleach and water 3) Boil again 4) Dry in Sun Thanks Kelly |
#2
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![]() "Kelly" wrote in message news:7LN0b.22601$at3.16964@edtnps84... Can someone tell me if I am preparing this sal****er driftwood properly for a fresh water tank?? 1) Boil repeatedly and change water until water stays clear 2) soak in bleach and water 3) Boil again 4) Dry in Sun Thanks Kelly A soak in heavily de-chlorinated water should take care of any residual bleach left behind. Personally I might have thrown it in without any harsh treatments. Any contagions or parasites would be of a marine origin, and would probably have found your freshwater environment to be inhospitable. There would be minimal tannins leached if it was already underwater for any length of time. Some residual salt would have little effect to most tropical fish (unless it was a huge piece of wood in a tiny aquarium), and the salinity would be regularly diluted through weekly water changes. Myself, I'd rinse in hot water, sink & soak in a tub for a few days (changing the water periodically, to dilute any pollutants the wood might have absorbed). If I was feeling especially paranoid, I'd put Aquarisol in the first few soaks (used as a net dip for sterilizing), and put a guppy in the tub for an extra week. Boiling is always harmless (and not a bad idea, if the wood fits in a pot). How cavalier you want to be depends on whether it's going in with prize winning Discus, or something less. I'm not a fan of using agents which are toxic to fish with materials which absorb the agents, so wood and bleach would be an undesirable combination, requiring extra effort to ensure it's safe again (just my opinion based on limited experience ![]() NetMax |
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I agree I use bleach for a ton of aquarium things, but I would never consider
it for anything I would think would absorb the bleach, ive tried it on a few things to try to extend there useable life, and for me it never is worth the time and effort required to be 100% sure there is no bleach left -- Richard Reynolds I'm not a fan of using agents which are toxic to fish with materials which absorb the agents, so wood and bleach would be an undesirable combination, requiring extra effort to ensure it's safe again (just my opinion based on limited experience ![]() NetMax For use in freshwater. To kill off most everything on a piece of driftwood, soak it for a long time is a super saturated salt solution. It will want to float, so weigh it do with a rock. After a week or three, soak it in fresh water and change daily. If you can't taste salty water, it's ready (& if you're still ok - it's safe!) Bob |
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