Driftwood in the home aquarium-discussion thread

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J double R

The Devil
Jan 13, 2007
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well, i must say the OP did a great job putting the article together, i followed it to a T and have had no problems!


;) hehehe
 

Soul Chile

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Dec 2, 2009
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Awesome post. I look forward to collecting some pieces in the near future and seeing what I can get together. :thm:
 

AquaticZen

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Aug 2, 2010
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Great post! still nervous about cleaning driftwood thought as its my first time doing it. =( I want some driftwood so bad! lol
 

J double R

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Cleaning is no biggie. Remember.. if wood is easily damaged during cleaning, it may be susceptible to rot in your tank. Be gentle, but firm in scrubbing the pieces.
 

mchimiak

Piscator
Aug 1, 2010
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I wimped out and just simply bought my piece at the LFS. My small loach swam into a hole and now calls the driftwood home.

The plants in the pic are about a month old on the driftwood.

 

Salt4Sam

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Aug 4, 2010
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New wood looks great!

I read this and went around looking for pieces of wood everywhere i went, hoping to find that perfect piece. Just so happened to find it at a LFS, threw a couple plants at it, and Viola! Tank looks much better, thanks for the great advice, as always sir. :bowing:
 

utty

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Oct 11, 2010
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This is a great article. I have been into collecting wood for my aquariums over the last two days. I found a great source. I found wood that has been sitting in the sun for probably over a decade. It is gray and weighs almost nothing. I boil it and after a few hours it sinks and doesn't leach tannnins. I think because it was so thoroughly sun dried it is easy to prepare. I am going to collect more. The only thing is that it's small. However because it's small I can boil large amounts at one time. I have tried to use driftwood in the past I would say that the most important thing to getting it is how dried out it is. The more dried out the better. The wood I have now is a very hard wood even after its been boiling for hours in salt water.
 

Haydn24

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Jun 28, 2010
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I'm currently soaking a large price I found in my pond. It's too large to boil but I will try soak it in a salt water bin :)
 

Squawkbert

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Oct 3, 2006
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Excellent article. The only thing I've done differently is to use zip ties to anchor a really buoyant piece to rocks in my 20H. It's tougher to hide that fix than silicone or lag bolts and slate, but it's also lots cheaper and faster.
 
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