Removing Tanin from new Diftwood

Aptos

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Sep 15, 2008
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I just purchased a small piece of driftwood for my Bushynose Pleco.

What's the fastest way to prepare it for my tank?
 
If it has been cleaned adequately, plop it in the tank. If it is a bit "raw" you should be able to boil it a bit to kill anything that has grown on the wood. If you are concerned about the bit of color it will add to your tank, you could soak it for a while until you no longer see the color leaching out of the wood. The trouble with trying to get all the tannins out is that it could take from a week to a tear to be happy with the amount leaching out. The week isn't too bad but some wood will take a very long time.
 
I'm trying a method I read about from a few different sources on the internet. I can't remember the sites, but I know not everything you read online is accurate.

I'm going to boil for 15 minutes, dump the tannin-soaked water, and repeat 2 times.

Does this sound good?
 
It'll take a long time for the wood to stop releasing tannins although the amount of tannins released diminish over time. There's nothing wrong with tannins leaching in tanks.
 
I prefer the tannin look personally. You can boil the driftwood and add it to your tank. Water changes will lessen the appearance or you could run a good quality carbon to remove teh discoloration.
 
I've never had to deal with that. I've either had a tank I didn't mind having the tannis in (it can look cool) or I wind up buying pieces that are already submerged in my lfs's tanks ... yea, they often say they're not for sale but, really, they are.
 
carbon in the filter will help. boiling it and soaking it will help. is it already water logged?

I've boiled it 3 times for 15 minutes each so far. Seems like a lot of the tannin is out at this point.

It wasn't water logged, but I don't know if it can be very water logged because it's a root and thus very dense. It definitely sinks swiftly.

I personally like clear water; that along with my 10,000k bulb make everything look very clean and neat.
 
Once you boiled it a few times. You can see how much tannins are released into the pot your boiling it in. The water in your tank will not get yellow looking over night. It will take a while to get a "dirty" looking color, and if you do your regular weekly partial water changes I doubt the slight tinge will be all that noticeable. You can use carbon in your filter to help absorb the slight discoloration also.
 
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