This year, I started four new plants.
- In early Spring 2023, I added some terrestrial ferns that were growing feral in the gravel floor of our greenhouse; I added 2-3 rhizomes with fronds directly into the top of one of the tanks (where the glass hood was cracked open) in the greenhouse. Over the whole Spring, they didn't do much except just hang on, but now they are shooting up new fronds.
- In early June, I plucked some Houttuynia cordata (chameleon plant or fish mint) growing feral in the gravel floor of the greenhouse; as with the ferns, I just stuck the fish mint into the (same) tank directly.
- In early July, I purchased a curly bamboo and added it to a 60 gallon breeder in the greenhouse.
- In early July, I collected some wild, naturally occurring horsetail plants and I inserted them in the HOB of the same tank in the greenhouse. As I expected, they initially started to die back from the trauma of the transplant, but now they are shooting up multiple new stems.
- Simultaneously, I got some delicious cherry tomatoes (sadly, I don't know the cultivar) and I planted a half dozen of the tomatoes in soil to germinate the seeds. Once those seedlings got started (around July 20), I transferred them to the same HOB.
Eventually, I'll need to thin the tomato plants and move them directly into the tank. I plan to get rid of the wild-type cherry tomatoes because they don't taste that great, and I'll substitute these better tasting tomatoes into the tank. I hope to keep the horsetails in the HOB, but if they get too big, I'll find a way to suspend them along the back wall of the tank.
Cheers, Eric