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#1
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Hyacinth Experiment
After reading many ways to try and keep Water Hyacinth over winter I tried
the following: 1. Placed a plant in a quart jar in a sunny window. Kept water topped up. 2. Placed a plant in a floating tub under grow lights from 7am to 11pm. 3. Placed a plant in a net bag and sunk to the bottom of the pond. 4 feet. Result. - They all died. Too bad. Heather |
#2
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Hyacinth Experiment
I tried to keep some alive in a small tank
in a south facing window, all I got was a lot of algee. BUT, Joe a member of the pons NG sent me a box FULL of Hyacinths that arrived today, it was like Christmas in April. There were three gallon size zip lock bags crammed full of plants. Assuming they all live, I won't need to buy any more. THANKS JOE ! ! ! Ron ------------------------------------------------- C.R."Ron"Lawrence KC4YOY Antique Radio Collector & Historian NCI-5445 POBox 3015 Matthews, NC 28106-3015 704-289-1166 (home) Radio Collection Web Page, http://www.radioheaven.homestead.com Clough-Brengle equipment web page http://CloughBrengle.homestead.com CC-AWA Web Page, http://www.cc-awa.org |
#3
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Hyacinth Experiment
On Wed, 28 Apr 2004 17:47:36 -0400, "Heather"
wrote: After reading many ways to try and keep Water Hyacinth over winter I tried the following: 1. Placed a plant in a quart jar in a sunny window. Kept water topped up. 2. Placed a plant in a floating tub under grow lights from 7am to 11pm. 3. Placed a plant in a net bag and sunk to the bottom of the pond. 4 feet. Result. - They all died. Too bad. Heather I kept some alive in an sweater box setting in a south-west facing window. I had an aquarium heater, and covered the top with plastic blister wrap. The ones in the pond survived in better shape, tho. -- - Charles - -does not play well with others |
#4
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Hyacinth Experiment
On Wed, 28 Apr 2004 17:47:36 -0400, "Heather"
wrote: After reading many ways to try and keep Water Hyacinth over winter I tried the following: 1. Placed a plant in a quart jar in a sunny window. Kept water topped up. 2. Placed a plant in a floating tub under grow lights from 7am to 11pm. 3. Placed a plant in a net bag and sunk to the bottom of the pond. 4 feet. Result. - They all died. Too bad. Heather LOL... When you sink them, if any of it is green, tear off the dead parts and let it be. I sunk three and kept one tiny piece of one plant and it is taking off. Or, just go buy new ones |
#5
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Hyacinth Experiment
You're welcome. Next spring I plan to be more on the ball. In San Diego the
hyacinth don't die over winter in my pond; they just get ratty looking. Anyway, earlier in the year as I was cleaning up the pond I threw out a few trash bags of hyacinth. Didn't even enter my little tiny pea brain that someone else might want them. Joe On 4/28/04 3:41 PM, "Ron, KC4YOY" wrote: BUT, Joe a member of the pons NG sent me a box FULL of Hyacinths that arrived today, it was like Christmas in April. There were three gallon size zip lock bags crammed full of plants. Assuming they all live, I won't need to buy any more. THANKS JOE ! ! ! -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#6
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Hyacinth Experiment
"Heather" wrote in message ... After reading many ways to try and keep Water Hyacinth over winter I tried the following: Result. - They all died. ============================== They're hard to keep over the winter but I have been successful. The best way I found : They need a very sunny window and algae kept off their roots by using something the sun doesn't shine through. I wrapped aluminum foil around a wide mouth old gallon pickle jar. This also keeps the water from getting too warm. They need FERTILIZER all winter, but only enough to keep a healthy green color. They need to be DEBUGGED constantly as they're mite magnets. The mites suck the life out of them. In my opinion... they're not worth the bother. -- Carol.... "A closed mouth gathers no feet." http://www.heartoftn.net/users/windsong/index.html ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
#7
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Hyacinth Experiment
You are so right!
There was algae on the roots. I did not sheild the light there. I did not give fertilizer. The mites were all over the plants in the floating tub but missed the plant in the other end of the house in the quart jar. Maybe I will try again. After all there is a challenge there..... Cheers, Heather "~ Windsong ~" wrote in message news "Heather" wrote in message ... After reading many ways to try and keep Water Hyacinth over winter I tried the following: Result. - They all died. ============================== They're hard to keep over the winter but I have been successful. The best way I found : They need a very sunny window and algae kept off their roots by using something the sun doesn't shine through. I wrapped aluminum foil around a wide mouth old gallon pickle jar. This also keeps the water from getting too warm. They need FERTILIZER all winter, but only enough to keep a healthy green color. They need to be DEBUGGED constantly as they're mite magnets. The mites suck the life out of them. In my opinion... they're not worth the bother. -- Carol.... "A closed mouth gathers no feet." http://www.heartoftn.net/users/windsong/index.html ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
#8
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Hyacinth Experiment
We are now in the 5th season with our hyacinths. All the indoor wintering
efforts failed. Here in MS, the pond does not deeply freeze. We get 1/2" of ice once of twice. Our water, obviously, gets to 32. Mostly, however, it is in the 30's or even 40's in the winter. We put a plastic sheet over the hyacinth before the first real freeze. We leave the leaves on. In the spring, the leaves are mostly dead from the cold, but the roots make it as do a few leaves. Once the temp is reliably into the 40's, we strip off the dead leaves and toss the mostly nude plant into the pond. They explode with growth and babies when it gets warmer. Moral: if the core of the plant does not freeze, it comes back. Jim -- ____________________________________________ See our pond at: home.bellsouth.net\p\pwp-jameshurley Ask me about Jog-A-Thon fundraiser (clears $120+ per child) at: jogathon.net "Heather" wrote in message ... After reading many ways to try and keep Water Hyacinth over winter I tried the following: 1. Placed a plant in a quart jar in a sunny window. Kept water topped up. 2. Placed a plant in a floating tub under grow lights from 7am to 11pm. 3. Placed a plant in a net bag and sunk to the bottom of the pond. 4 feet. Result. - They all died. Too bad. Heather |
#9
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Hyacinth Experiment
Yep!
On Wed, 28 Apr 2004 21:54:19 -0500, "Jim and Phyllis Hurley" wrote: We are now in the 5th season with our hyacinths. All the indoor wintering efforts failed. Here in MS, the pond does not deeply freeze. We get 1/2" of ice once of twice. Our water, obviously, gets to 32. Mostly, however, it is in the 30's or even 40's in the winter. We put a plastic sheet over the hyacinth before the first real freeze. We leave the leaves on. In the spring, the leaves are mostly dead from the cold, but the roots make it as do a few leaves. Once the temp is reliably into the 40's, we strip off the dead leaves and toss the mostly nude plant into the pond. They explode with growth and babies when it gets warmer. Moral: if the core of the plant does not freeze, it comes back. Jim |
#10
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Hyacinth Experiment
all of you want that hyacinth cause it has that one measly flower at a time and only
for one day. if you can give that ephemeral flower up, then you can forget hyacinths AND water lettuce and get on with much friendlier, more useful and hardier plants for veggie filters. properly fertilized water lilies in large pots will nearly cover the entire surface of a pond. Ingrid ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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. |
#11
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Hyacinth Experiment
[original post is likely clipped to save bandwidth]
On Wed, 28 Apr 2004 17:47:36 -0400, "Heather" wrote: After reading many ways to try and keep Water Hyacinth over winter I tried the following: 1. Placed a plant in a quart jar in a sunny window. Kept water topped up. 2. Placed a plant in a floating tub under grow lights from 7am to 11pm. 3. Placed a plant in a net bag and sunk to the bottom of the pond. 4 feet. Result. - They all died. Too bad. After 3 years, I wintered them just fine! (MA Zone 5). I put them under metal halide lights, lost all the first year Last year only two sickly ones survived - took off fine. This year I have dozens looking pretty good, if a tad small. Secret was not temperature indoors, it was mo algae on the roots, cleaning dead debris, aeration and a major dose of fertilizer in February. gerry -- Personal home page - http://gogood.com gerry misspelled in my email address to confuse robots |
#12
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Hyacinth Experiment
wrote in message ... all of you want that hyacinth cause it has that one measly flower at a time and only for one day. if you can give that ephemeral flower up, then you can forget hyacinths AND water lettuce and get on with much friendlier, more useful and hardier plants for veggie filters. properly fertilized water lilies in large pots will nearly cover the entire surface of a pond. Ingrid The water lettuce I had last year had very dense root cones much like a water hyacinth, but all of hyacinth had much larger cones. For a filter plant I'd prefer WH, but the lettuce is a close second. Lillies will cover the pond, but IMHO they just don't have the root mass to be good filter plants. I don't care about the flowers. I want them ROOTS!!! Which reminds me...I still need WH...and can't find any. -- BV. www.iheartmypond.com |
#13
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Hyacinth Experiment
Actually, I could care less if the hyacinth bloom. I think they are one of
the best plants for a veggie filter. Several years ago, here in San Diego, the city was even experimenting with them to see how well they could clean sewage. Joe On 4/29/04 7:58 AM, " wrote: all of you want that hyacinth cause it has that one measly flower at a time and only for one day. if you can give that ephemeral flower up, then you can forget hyacinths AND water lettuce and get on with much friendlier, more useful and hardier plants for veggie filters. properly fertilized water lilies in large pots will nearly cover the entire surface of a pond. Ingrid -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#14
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Hyacinth Experiment
I have to join the root crew. Flowers are nice to look at. Roots filter,
hold bacteria and grab nutrients. Actually, the WH looks pretty good and covers surface. Not bad. Also provides LOTS of mulch once they get reproducing. J -- ____________________________________________ See our pond at: home.bellsouth.net\p\pwp-jameshurley Ask me about Jog-A-Thon fundraiser (clears $120+ per child) at: jogathon.net wrote in message ... all of you want that hyacinth cause it has that one measly flower at a time and only for one day. if you can give that ephemeral flower up, then you can forget hyacinths AND water lettuce and get on with much friendlier, more useful and hardier plants for veggie filters. properly fertilized water lilies in large pots will nearly cover the entire surface of a pond. Ingrid ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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. |
#15
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Hyacinth Experiment
lilies are to cover and cool water, the veggie filter is to clean the water and other
water plants are superior in that my water celery and cyperus can get 4-5 feet high with such enormous root balls I can barely get them back out of the veggie filter. hyacinths are water lettuce are pikers when it comes to roots. their ONLY advantage is they float and their roots can be eaten by the fish. Ingrid "Benign Vanilla" wrote: I don't care about the flowers. I want them ROOTS!!! Which reminds me...I still need WH...and can't find any. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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. |
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