bog wood or drift wood uk
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bog wood or drift wood uk
bog wood or drift wood any small pieces for my new fry tank full of baby bristlenoses.
- MatsP
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Re: bog wood or drift wood uk
Surely almost any LFS including Pest-at-home would be able to supply this...
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Re: bog wood or drift wood uk
yer how ever i don't want to pay £7 for a small piece.
would drift wood from the beach be any good ?
would drift wood from the beach be any good ?
- TheSmurfinator
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Re: bog wood or drift wood uk
I'm no expert as I've only just started keeping catfish and only been keeping fish at all for a year, but I would think it would be full of salt and would alter your PH?.....
13 tanks and counting....
- Richard B
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Re: bog wood or drift wood uk
Nice spelling Mats!MatsP wrote:Surely almost any LFS including Pest-at-home would be able to supply this...
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Mats
Lou: Every young man's fantasy is to have a three-way.
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- Richard B
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- Interests: Tanganyika Catfish, African catfish, Non-loricariid sucker-catfish.
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Re: bog wood or drift wood uk
Drift wood from the beach can be ok, but not always. it depends upon the type of wood which cannot always be determined & may have picked up contaminants.
I have used beach driftwood with great success but always thoroughly cleaned it before use. I also find that unlike specific aquarium woods, it is extremely bouyant.
I have used beach driftwood with great success but always thoroughly cleaned it before use. I also find that unlike specific aquarium woods, it is extremely bouyant.
Lou: Every young man's fantasy is to have a three-way.
Jacob: Yeah not with another fu**!ng guy!
Lou: It's still a three-way!
Hot Tub Time Machine: 2010
Jacob: Yeah not with another fu**!ng guy!
Lou: It's still a three-way!
Hot Tub Time Machine: 2010
- racoll
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Re: bog wood or drift wood uk
Collecting wood yourself is cheapest, but it can be a pain with the wood floating and going mouldy. This problem you don't have when you buy mopani or Malaysian wood from a shop.
Best thing to suggest is to either buy a big bit and smash it up with a hammer, or spend a long time shopping around. Sometimes there are broken bits in the bottom of the wood bins in the shops, and they might give you those for a few quid.
Ebay might be another option.
Best thing to suggest is to either buy a big bit and smash it up with a hammer, or spend a long time shopping around. Sometimes there are broken bits in the bottom of the wood bins in the shops, and they might give you those for a few quid.
Ebay might be another option.
- MatsP
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Re: bog wood or drift wood uk
As long as the fungus isn't extreme, it shouldn't be a problem.mikepsmith1 wrote:If drift wood gets fungussed like this then it is not completely dead (don't know the details) and should not be used.
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Re: bog wood or drift wood uk
Some wood such as pine are poisonous. Beech and oak are ok. A few years ago I collect long pieces of dead beech, where the bark just peeled off or fell off. After soaking, it went in a 5' tank looking great. I can't remember how long it took, but it became covered in fungus. I took it out and washed it off, then put it back and treated the tank with a fungiside ( probably liquisil, but not sure, any will do the same). The fungus never returned and I used the wood for about 5 years.
- MatsP
- Posts: 21038
- Joined: 06 Oct 2004, 13:58
- My articles: 4
- My images: 28
- My cats species list: 117 (i:33, k:0)
- My aquaria list: 10 (i:8)
- My BLogs: 4 (i:0, p:97)
- Spotted: 187
- Location 1: North of Cambridge
- Location 2: England.
Re: bog wood or drift wood uk
Or just keep an Ancistrus or some such in the tank.
And sorry if this thread looks a bit odd, but "mikepsmith1" is a spammer, so I deleted the post - despite being reasonably meaningful in the context.
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Mats
And sorry if this thread looks a bit odd, but "mikepsmith1" is a spammer, so I deleted the post - despite being reasonably meaningful in the context.
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Mats