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#1
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Winterizing tropical water plants
I know it is too early to be thinking of this but this will help me on
how much to invest in tropical plants vs hardy lilies for this year. Can these tropical plants such as water lettuce, hyacinth, etc be brought inside and put in large buckets with artificial lighting and expect them to live until spring ? |
#2
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Winterizing tropical water plants
On Sun, 23 Apr 2006 15:28:45 -0400, CanadianCowboy©
wrote: Can these tropical plants such as water lettuce, hyacinth, etc be brought inside Yes, though, imo, they're more work than worth the savings. Put about half the root in dirt (or contact with dirt), as they can't get enough food out of water alone inside (I assume) with enough water to still float. You must debug them before they come in, and again about 3 months later. Very bright light, plus being next to a window and getting real sun, seems to do it. ~ jan ----------------- (Do you know where your water quality is?) |
#3
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Winterizing tropical water plants
I was thinking about the same thing myself, but after reading about all the
problems about saving them, I decided, as Jan said, it is not worth the hassle and just buy new each spring Gale - Another Canadian Cowboy :~))))))))))))))))))))))0 Can these tropical plants such as water lettuce, hyacinth, etc be brought inside Yes, though, imo, they're more work than worth the savings. Put about half the root in dirt (or contact with dirt), as they can't get enough food out of water alone inside (I assume) with enough water to still float. You must debug them before they come in, and again about 3 months later. Very bright light, plus being next to a window and getting real sun, seems to do it. ~ jan ----------------- (Do you know where your water quality is?) |
#4
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Winterizing tropical water plants
"CanadianCowboy©" wrote in message ... I know it is too early to be thinking of this but this will help me on how much to invest in tropical plants vs hardy lilies for this year. Can these tropical plants such as water lettuce, hyacinth, etc be brought inside and put in large buckets with artificial lighting and expect them to live until spring ? ================== I only got water hyacinth to live through one winter in my sunroom. They're more work than they're worth.Water lettuce will survive nicely in moving water and some fertilizer. I keep them over in several aquariums. I don't buy tropical pond plants any more. I'd rather the hardy ones so I can leave them outside all year 'round. -- Koi-Lo.... Frugal ponding since 1995. Aquariums since 1952. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 *Note: There are several *Koi-Lo's* on rec.ponds. ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#5
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Winterizing tropical water plants
"CanadianCowboy©" wrote in message ... I know it is too early to be thinking of this but this will help me on how much to invest in tropical plants vs hardy lilies for this year. Can these tropical plants such as water lettuce, hyacinth, etc be brought inside and put in large buckets with artificial lighting and expect them to live until spring ? I pretty much agree with what everyone else said. I kept some Water Hyacinth and Water Lettuce inside this year and the WH grew very well. I'm not sure if there is any WL left, as the WH has outgrown it by leaps and bounds. I've had to throw out a bunch of the WH and there are still too many. It cost me about $20 a month for the lighting and the Hydro is scheduled to go up big time next year. At $5.00 a plant for new ones the cost is a toss up. I probably have a 100 plants now, but many are plantlets and not the full fledged ones with roots. The bugs are also an issue as Jan mentioned. I've had several outbreaks of those small flys and I even had a Damsel fly a few weeks ago. |
#6
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Winterizing tropical water plants
Koi-Lo wrote:
I don't buy tropical pond plants any more. I'd rather the hardy ones so I can leave them outside all year 'round. Do you recommend any other hardy water plants other than the classic lilies ? |
#7
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Winterizing tropical water plants
"CanadianCowboy©" wrote in message ... Koi-Lo wrote: I don't buy tropical pond plants any more. I'd rather the hardy ones so I can leave them outside all year 'round. Do you recommend any other hardy water plants other than the classic lilies ? ===================== I've liked just about all of them that I've tried. My favorites are the parrots feather, the pickerel weed, hardly water plantain, yellow and other colored water iris, water bamboo, mini and striped cat's tail. Sweet flag is too flimsy. The frogs keep it broken and hanging over. Lizards tail is almost indestructible and very attractive when well grown in full sun. I also have a Lotus in a 100g pool of it's own. Lotus will take over a pond if they can. These are their common names. I would have to look up their latan names if you need them. -- Koi-Lo.... Frugal ponding since 1995. Aquariums since 1952. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 *Note: There are several *Koi-Lo's* on rec.ponds. ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#8
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Winterizing tropical water plants
Here in Chicago a water lettuce or hyacinth costs around $4. I buy one
of each at the beginning of the season and literally have to throw them out all summer because they multiply so much. Not worth saving for $8 investment in my opinion. G Pearce wrote: I was thinking about the same thing myself, but after reading about all the problems about saving them, I decided, as Jan said, it is not worth the hassle and just buy new each spring Gale - Another Canadian Cowboy :~))))))))))))))))))))))0 Can these tropical plants such as water lettuce, hyacinth, etc be brought inside Yes, though, imo, they're more work than worth the savings. Put about half the root in dirt (or contact with dirt), as they can't get enough food out of water alone inside (I assume) with enough water to still float. You must debug them before they come in, and again about 3 months later. Very bright light, plus being next to a window and getting real sun, seems to do it. ~ jan ----------------- (Do you know where your water quality is?) |
#9
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Winterizing tropical water plants
Hi..
water lettuce, Well, have kept offshots indoors for three winters now. Never had any problem with them in open unheated tanks and in a small half-open tropical tank without filter. In winter its small leafs (as big as coins) look like "hairy" European frog-bit. At the moment mine beside the Souterrain window start growing and raising its leafs in its typical manner. hyacinth, Well had no good experience with them in the house. They didn't like condensation, got mould.. No tropicals but good in summer ponds: Egeria densa, Parrot feather, Water cress, Ludwigia Rotala rotundifolia -- cu Marco |
#10
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Winterizing tropical water plants
I have had luck with some tropicals that normally wouldn't survive by
putting them in the deepest part of my pond before winter. I am in Zone 5 (Chicago) and use a heater to keep the water from freezing. You'd be surprised how many tropicals/sub-tropicals can survive in the 30s. Freezing is what will kill most. With my cover and heater and the ground as an insulator, the bottom of the pond is probably always at least 38 degrees. |
#11
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Winterizing tropical water plants
Moments before taking that leap of faith into the pond Mike C
at was heard opining: I have had luck with some tropicals that normally wouldn't survive by putting them in the deepest part of my pond before winter. I am in Zone 5 (Chicago) and use a heater to keep the water from freezing. You'd be surprised how many tropicals/sub-tropicals can survive in the 30s. Freezing is what will kill most. With my cover and heater and the ground as an insulator, the bottom of the pond is probably always at least 38 degrees. ===================== Which tropicals were you able to keep over this way? I don't buy them anymore because I don't have room in my sunroom for any more plants in the winter. Some tropicals get BIG. I'm in zone 6 central TN. -- Koi-Lo.... Frugal ponding since 1995. Aquariums since 1952. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#12
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Winterizing tropical water plants
It's a little early to tell what made it this year. I know my Spider
Lily made it. It is not really a troppical, but it definitely is not rated to survive a zone 5 winter. I am hoping my Taro comes back up too. |
#13
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Winterizing tropical water plants
Moments before taking that leap of faith into the pond Mike C at
was heard opining: It's a little early to tell what made it this year. I know my Spider Lily made it. It is not really a troppical, but it definitely is not rated to survive a zone 5 winter. I am hoping my Taro comes back up too. ============================= *Note: There are TWO "Koi-Lo's" on this NG* Is your spider lily white or red? I have the red one the woman called a red swamp lily. It almost looks like an Amaryllis they sell at Christmas time. I'm not sure what it is but she said it was tropical. I do bring both in for the winter but they don't do well inside, getting spindly and pale. I bring my Taro in as well and it always manages to have a spider-mite infestation before Thanksgiving. These tropicals are barely worth the work they take to keep them over...... Please let me know if your Taro comes back. I'd love to leave mine out this coming winter. -- Koi-Lo.... Frugal ponding since 1995. Aquariums since 1952. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
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