http://www.lazyreign.com/moss-scape/
Moss Scape
Where I can buy driftwood really small roots or driftwood?
I have a 1-liter aquarium and I'm going to plant it with HC and a wall of Java moss. 7×6.5×5 the tank is and I know where I can find bits of wood that fit into this. I do not care if it sticks out of the water a little as 1-3 inches or less. also if u do not recommend those times where can i find rocks to get away with it?
I have decorated my tank …. the river and the forest, sometimes the lake. Avoid areas of known contamination / pollution, did not gather all the rotten wood, and avoid any evergreen wood (cedar, pine, fir, pine, etc) unless old.Look several years for hardwood, if possible (maple, oak, walnut, etc.) You may have pieces at home, wipe with a wire brush, rinse with tap water, and enjoy a bucket for a couple of weeks to get the tannins, then boiled to make sure they are sterile. With a little rocks, make sure they are solid (no sandstone or soapstone), pour the vinegar over them to see a reaction (if any effervescent and bubbly … … throw), wire brush while rinsing with tap water, put some chlorine-free water in a pan (wait an hour) and test pH and water hardness then putting stones and try again in 2-3 days.If there is a significant increase in either or both of the readings – get rid of them (unless you have a tank then that would work ARLC for buffering) sounds more difficult than buying somewhere … but still would have to clean and verify them.This way you get exactly what you want. Another thing that might interest you is the bark of cork (not for the tables note … real cork bark) and the type of reptile natural habitats.Get untreated (no anti-microbial waste added … label will say if you have one) and treat it like driftwood … soaking and boiling. Once prepared it can be cut in the shape of the back of your tank for a total 3 – D background.You fix it with a small aquarium sealant (let dry completely before adding water). Java Fern, Java Moss, Anubias sp., And other mosses can interesting this.Makes connect to a "wall of moss" or "snag" effect.
Daylilies: The Multi-Color Perennial
Perennials are very popular for the home gardener. They grow and bloom every year. It will survive the usually winter bulbs, tubers, rhizomes and woody crows carrying more of new growth next year. The Daylily has landscapes growing from the roots. During outbreaks of buds that later landscapes as individual flowers open.
Some dictionaries flowers detail Day lilies as a name of two words. Currently not part of the genus Lily, but the key word "day" are noted for their flowers all days. A flower of a day lily, or as I will spell out the flower, Daylily, opens with the arrival of the sun and come wilt and die overnight. The fascinating thing This flower is that although the flowers are short-lived, there are new shoots that sometimes bloom each successive day.
Care of Daylilies
Daylilies are flowers which, like sunlight does not, unlike roses. The more light you have in the plant, the flowers are produced in most cases. If this is a shaded area, can get more of the type of grass leaves and foliage that surround the flower. So if you want the green, with fewer flowers, you can have a very marked green foliage with flower Occasionally, it may be good for along a fence or landscaping scheme. The color of the factors that bloom too. With flowers darker red, violet require less light due to absorption of heat from the dark pigment. Dark colors are trapping heat and hot and may die. Benefit most of the spots partial shade.
Water is key to the plant has flowers as well. During the spring the plants need a lot of water to promote good growth. Without But the plants have been the bread of a remarkable amount of warmth during dry periods. They are very resistant to water shortages, but to be successful it is prudent at least to have good water in its growth stage. A rule of thumb to set your daylilies matters is sure they are watered by an inch each week.
Before planting flowers, be sure to include a good amount of mulch to the soil. Flowers need a good amount of drainage, so some planters to create a raised bed of soil mixed with organic matter. If the soil is clayey and sticky, add wood chips, straw or other material of high fiber diet. Find the mean, so if you have too much loose soil, add some peat moss or humus so that water can gather around the roots.
About the Author
Art Gib writes for Perennial Place (http://www.perennialplace.com) who grows several perennial flowers and plants including many colorful hybridizations of the Daylily flower. Perennial Place started growing daylilies as a hobby but later grew to full blown operation with many perennial choices.