<img src="uploads/bobo31/951_clip_image002.jpg" border="0">
Sorry for the not so good picture.
Light: Hight light. ~3 WPG but also does well in lower lighting.
Growth: very fast in high light.
Demands: Likes high NO3.
Pruning: top and replant. Eventually you will have to up root it all and replant though. It will start to shade the lower stem and then rot and float up.
Water hardness: 4dGH. 7dKH.
Experiences: I have seen this plant fill an entire 75 gallon foreground in a matter of two weeks. The foreground was started with about a 6"x6" portion.
Robert.
Elatine Triandra
- Ben Belton
- Posts: 633
- Joined: Fri Feb 06, 2004 12:21 am
- Location: Mayberry, NC
- Contact:
My experience with this plant is that it does not keep a lot of nutrients stored and if you let levels drop, the plant is gone very quickly. On the good side though, it puts out seeds like crazy and within a few months it's popping back up everywhere again.
That's not a bad pic. It's better than the ones I take.
Ben
That's not a bad pic. It's better than the ones I take.
Ben
Well, you gave me those few stalks, and I floated them. Then, my 75G went crazy with nutrient imbalances, rocks leeching, a CO2 reactor failing to work as it should, etc. Long story short, I've just started to get it rebalanced again, and I replanted one stem that I had left. In the last week, it's tripled in size, so yeah, I can see that it grows pretty fast. I'm looking forward to having it take up a nice part of my foreground. (I'm hoping that'll happen by the time I host the meeting in a few weeks!)
- Ben Belton
- Posts: 633
- Joined: Fri Feb 06, 2004 12:21 am
- Location: Mayberry, NC
- Contact:
Kris,
Thanks for the advice!
Mine's growing nicely in my 20g, but the clowns have uprooted a lot of it in my 75g looking for snails. Dang loaches! I knew they might do that, but I was hoping they wouldn't
I'm going to add some more in here and there and probably move the clowns to another tank while it grows.
Roan
Thanks for the advice!
Mine's growing nicely in my 20g, but the clowns have uprooted a lot of it in my 75g looking for snails. Dang loaches! I knew they might do that, but I was hoping they wouldn't
I'm going to add some more in here and there and probably move the clowns to another tank while it grows.
Roan
Yeah, those loaches are hit or miss.. I have two ginormous (i know this is not a word) red-tailed blue botia loaches in my 75G that thankfully leave my plants alone. Honestly, I wouldn't know they were still alive except for the occasional bi-monthly sighting.
Not to get off-topic, but if you like loaches for snail control, but dislike having big loaches, I highly recommend the botia sidthimunki dwarf loaches. They're cute, don't hide like some other loaches, full of energy, eat snails, and best of all, stay 2-3" in length.
Not to get off-topic, but if you like loaches for snail control, but dislike having big loaches, I highly recommend the botia sidthimunki dwarf loaches. They're cute, don't hide like some other loaches, full of energy, eat snails, and best of all, stay 2-3" in length.