Ornament Treatments
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Ornament Treatments
Hello, I recently moved to a new house and the back garden resembles some kind of oasis. Partially buried in gravel, I found a great terracota urn that i'd like to add to my tank. It currently has a nice selection of blotchy growth on it. Is there a process I should run through before adding the urn to the tank, or will a bath of boiling water do it?
Many Thanks
Paul
Many Thanks
Paul
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Re: Ornament Treatments
That and a nice scrub should do the trick.Genieworx wrote:Or will a bath of boiling water do it?
- racoll
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the plecs will eat it.
like any other algae; once it's submerged. imagina a rock with green algae on it near a river; once the rainy season floods the countryside you bet those plecs are gonna graze those rocks.
personally i never bother with cooking materials from a garden or so.
why? because on garden ornamentals there are no fish diseases.......
you only need to do a good shrub and rinse, that's all.
and never ever use ANY chemical; be it soap, bleach, chalc, vinegar etc! traces of one of these hitching along for a ride to the tank can be far MORE dangerous than a bit of gooy algae.
terracotta itself is inert, but it's also very porous; it can and does absord a load of water. now if IN that water there's vinegar, soap, chemicals.....those substances hitch a ride to your tank and screw up your pH, poison the fishes etc.
like any other algae; once it's submerged. imagina a rock with green algae on it near a river; once the rainy season floods the countryside you bet those plecs are gonna graze those rocks.
personally i never bother with cooking materials from a garden or so.
why? because on garden ornamentals there are no fish diseases.......
you only need to do a good shrub and rinse, that's all.
and never ever use ANY chemical; be it soap, bleach, chalc, vinegar etc! traces of one of these hitching along for a ride to the tank can be far MORE dangerous than a bit of gooy algae.
terracotta itself is inert, but it's also very porous; it can and does absord a load of water. now if IN that water there's vinegar, soap, chemicals.....those substances hitch a ride to your tank and screw up your pH, poison the fishes etc.
Valar Morghulis
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terracotta itself is inert, but it's also very porous; it can and does absord a load of water. now if IN that water there's vinegar, soap, chemicals.....those substances hitch a ride to your tank and screw up your pH, poison the fishes etc.
Good point Sid.
Always carry out any tests on pieces of decor that aren't going in the aquarium.