*Need more planted tank hacks? Check out my whole series of "5 things I wish I knew" about planted aquariums:* ua-cam.com/play/PLlBBJ7xBuqub-rl6z7cnGfSp_rUoyGN0U.html
Its gonna die I really don't want to find the fish dead but no one has answered my question directly by that time it would be dead way too late & have died pleal(
I really enjoy watching your awesome videos. I do have a question for you on soil substrate. I watch a video of Cory from Aquarium CO-OP and he mentioned that soil based substrates eventually get depleted of nutrients. That being said soils have high CEC therefore they shouldn’t run out of nutrients? Would they not be able to absorb it from the water column? And last indefinitely? Thanks Thanks
Another note for those pesky plants that love to float out of the substrate: let them grow longer roots, bundle the roots together and push them down into the substrate, then drag in a direction where you have room. This forces a line of roots under the soil and pulls the plant's base down into the substrate. This is especially effective in coarser substrates with more depth.
Oh I totally forgot to mention that trick! Thank you so much for mentioning it. And much appreciation for your previous helpful comment that I ended up referring to in this video. :)
Not a criticism, more of a question: I would have thought the opposite about the roots. Cut them short and lightly anchor the plant in place. If the plant is healthy it will quickly want to regrow its roots and they will make their way into the substrate and become better anchored. I have always been of the impression that if a plant already has a substantial root system then it’s roots will grow much more slowly and will take longer to become anchored. Wouldn’t this work better? Or am I missing something?
@@aaronws9561 if the roots are too small to hold it down, growing them out to act as an anchor helps, if they have very long roots, you can trim to 1.5-2" to anchor but encourage new growth
Your the most straight forward aquarium owner I know. You make it way easier for me to go off and do my own research about individual topics without feeling overwhelmed
Really enjoy your videos. As a 67 yr old grandma who has had aquariums off and on for many years, things change, and I have learned so much from your videos, so I subscribed. Keep up the excellent work, and I will review your previous videos and look forward to the next one! By the way, your children are precious.
I actually watch MD Fishtanks and other channels you mention that are well developed. But I really appreciate your videos! You make it feel more understandable and achievable for a hobbyist who will have just like 1 or 2 tanks. For sure I’m wanting to start one tank I bought, but it’s proving to be expensive and confusing.
Pro tip: You are doing fine going slow. Research...then sit with it. I started a 4' build project 3 months ago. I am still buying/procuring/preparing the things I need. Typically, it takes me 8 months from first purchase to actually getting water in the tank, so I have everything right the first time. I've kept aquariums since 1975.... Take your time and enjoy it, your plants and fish will thank you... and it will be stress reducing as the hobby was originally intended.
The method I use for planting is that I dig a shallow pit, then I plant it in the middle of that pit. Then I push the displaced substrate back into the pit, which purposefully buries the plant too deeply in the substrate. Finally, I gently pull on the plant to bring it up to the right height. This really secures the plant in, and it apparently also positions the roots more naturally. It does involve getting both your arms in the tank but I don't mind.
I did a LOT of research for what substrate to use for my planted nano tank (15 gal). I chose crushed lava rock for my bottom layer, inert Eco Complete for middle, topped with med course sand. I use root tabs for rooted plants and Easy Green liquid for the floating water column plants. So far quite happy with my results.
It's very important that I watch this. I have absolutely no plans to ever start an aquarium (I'm just not in a stable life position for it) but I need to understand planted aquarium substrates. Why? You ask. Because it's important!
If you're never going to have an aquarium then learning a bunch about aquariums is technically a waste of your time, but it is interesting enough to want to learn just for the sake of knowledge
One common thing i did from the internet is to put normal organic potting mix at the bottom and cap it off with a thicc layer of your cheap substrate. Unless you want algae fun-fest, don't let the soil seep to the water column. It works for me, so might as well share it to other peeps who may not know what a dirted tank is.
Irene, for the carpeting plants I do something similar to MD. I use a drop of crazy glue to attach the grass to a small pebble and wedge it at soil level. ☺️
To keep plants down, I put a small rock w an elastic to the roots. It's way easier, and wont mess up dirted tank as much. Less damage to the roots too, dont have to keep smushing them back down
I'm grateful I went deep despite the longer cycling and trickier initial balancing. 'Treat it like a plant.' Now, learn lasagna gardening ABOVE ground- now, you can think of aquascaping!
@@voluntaryismistheanswer I never connected how similar the 2 are! Thank you for sharing, now I have a better reference when I am teaching people about either.
@@csharpe5787 I will need to check that out. One of the reasons I have usually kept my substrate a bit thinner is to avoid anaerobic pockets. Does the video cover dealing with this problem?
Tips for planting a hex tank: put on a bathing suit, stand on a chair, plunge half your body in the water while holding the plant with your hand so you can reach the bottom. Make sure you have towels down so you dont drip all over the floor when you come up for air. 😂
Excellent excellent excellent. Thanks Irene. I’m having all those problems with tweezers, roots, and root tabs. I’m afraid to grab the root tabs too hard because they break (happened yesterday). I’m afraid to grab the plant stems too hard with the tweezers because it can cut through the stems. Thanks for giving us permission to just use the ultimate tweezers - our fingers!
I'm that person using soil from my own compost pile mixed with gravel then topped with something decorative to help keep it all in place. Definitely reccomend many water changes and time before adding animals if doing this! I think I'll be using the frozen dirt idea in future though! I've always relied on liquid aquarium fertilizer as tabs floating away annoys me.
Good video, one thing that's really helped me is plant weights. they're doing well for me in a new tank with Fluval Stratum. It's so lightweight and coarse, it doesn't hold anything in easily. It's REALLY frustrating trying to get rotala or staurogyne to stay in the dirt, I got plant weights from buceplant, very cheap strips of a very soft non reactive metal. I just cut a tiny little strip the size of a brad nail off with scissors, and squeeze it onto the stem. Just a tiny bit of weight reduces the buoyancy so plants won't float away, and the strip of metal acts like an anchor to boot. If you're done playing aquarium plant whack-a-mole, get some weights and be done with it, so glad I found them.
Thank you for this, I was gifted a 20 gallon tank and putting a game plan together. I’m going to layer the eco sub with a sand on top or eco where I plant only. Way to may options on what to do with a tank but I usually do a tank with what I have on hand. I got some beautiful colorful rocks and stones from Lake Ontario, driftwood from my Cabin lake in Belgrade Lakes, Maine. Rocks were just cleaned and sanitized, driftwood next.
I like the idea of the carpeting plant being planted into the substrate. Countless hours trying to replant little bunches of hairgrass. The green wool-like stuff the plants come in are ok to leave in the fish tank. . . Indefinitely?
Hearing the first tip made me so relieved. I began an aquarium a few weeks ago and as all my plants started rapidly growing, I realised a carpet would just put the whole thing together. Sadly, due to the price, I could only get sand as my substrate and relied on tab and liquid fertilisers. I was told there was no hope in growing a carpet with just sand, but I think now I'm confident to give it a try.
Love these videos. I am learning so much as this is my first time planting live plants. My wife doesn’t like them much but I think they look great! Thanks for making these videos!
Great info again! Love your videos. With root tabs, you can use a plastic tubes a plexiglass rod. Get one that's about the size of the diameter of the gel-tab. Push the gel-tab into the tube, and stab that into the substrate at a 45-degree angle, and use the plexiglass rod to pushed the tab into the substrate. Another tip. To prevent the gel-tabs from floating by poking a hole in it with a safety pin 🧷
I just love listening to you, you cut straight to the point, you really know what you're talking about and you always come about with such great tips and tricks. A huge plus is also your personality and voice, perfect for making videos! You're brilliant :)
Haha I’m back watching this video for a third time since it was uploaded and yet again taking away newly learned skills. Thanks so much, I just had to comment as this has been a great help!!
For planting carpeting plants: get some thin plastic coated gardening wire (garden centres sell them in reels) and cut many 2 inch lengths. Bend the top 5th back around and voila: mini tent pegs that keep your carpeting plants secure until they take root then simply remove. :)
I agree the whole add this stuff every x amount of time thing makes no sense. Watch your plants carefully and they will tell you what time it is. After a while you will note more or less of a rythm too it. Cut that period slythly shorter et voila. I have had tanks where every month was required and in other situations i got away with twice a year. In our hobby " it depends" is a good part of the answer for many if not most of the questions.
There's too many variables, it's like a recipe- if you are a novice it's a roadmap, don't veer!, but if you grasp the basics, it's unnecessary as me needing one to bake bread. You observe, and react accordingly.
Your videos have helped me out so much with my 10 gal.. in about a year my friend is moving away and leaving his 40 gal. with me, that substrate cost will get pretty expensive so where I can cut the costs I probably will.
What wonderful information on a big topic!! I do use some expensive Aqua soils sometimes... I've also gone with capping it with 3 in of sand... It really does wonders ♥️👍 Really great points on the mulm!! Thank you for covering root tabs and fertilizers!! And I also love that you covered the different types of plants and how to plant them 👍♥️🌿 Oh my goodness use two sets of tweezers 👍😂 best tip ever!!!!! Brilliant 😂👍♥️ I aways wondered about the rockwool thanks for that tip too 🤗 Love your videos Irene thank you so much for all you do and share!! I hope you have a very blessed day and a Happy Valentine day!!!♥️👍🌿🐟🌿🙏
Yay, so glad you enjoyed the video! Thank you so much for spending the time to comment on my content. I see how much time and effort you put into writing them, and I'm so happy to know that you like my channel. :)
All your tank settings are so beautiful! Its like a magical forest vibe. You should add like a fake decor of a redhead mushroom. I think it will look extremely cute
For some plants that end up floating and don't need to be necessarily rooted, I find putting them in a seashell works really well and matches the aesthetic
I actually used compost in the bottom of the tank, and just scooped off any of the floating materials after a few days. My tank is a completely crazy biosphere. I did about 2 inches of compost and covered with rock dust and sand. This tank can handle a ungodly amount of fish with minimal amounts of water filtration. I've not done a water change in years. I just refill from evaporation.
Great video! You hit all the points I was curious about.... I started a pandemic 45gal planted tank with guidance from good fish store. I did it right with the substrate, cycle, timed light, co2, liquid fertilizer etc. It was amazing until a few months ago where diff types of plants would either flourish or die off. Plants with biggest root system would do best. I've stayed steady with maintenance. Im thinking my substrate nutrients are used up?.... Just moved so now I get to relaunch the tank properly. Put all the plants in buckets. Have the fish in a 10gal for now using the same filter. I heavily vacuumed the gravel nefore removal and kept 20gal of the old tank water. Do you think fertilizer tabs would revitalize?
This is my first video of yours I've watched and I found it to be very be informative. I accidentally stumbled across it. I also found comfort with you mentioning Aquarium Co op. I plan on checking out your other videos now too! Thank you so much for taking the time to share.☺️
I enjoyed your video... it's nice to see another female in the hobbie! I've had high nutrient substrate for some time now with a heavily planted tank and now thinking of putting the nutrient substrate into mesh media bags and then cover with gravel and top up with natural light sand, as MD does in some of his videos. I'm tired of the algae from the nutrients and I dont have time for water changes very often, especially being a large tank (250L). Thanks for validating the high nutrient soil and algae.
Thanks for this great tutorial, when you say do frequent or daily water changes, how much of the water? 10%, 50%? At the moment I just have regular aquarium gravel and the plants are doing great. Thumbs up as always :)
Thanks for the comment! Depends on how "potent" the substrate is, but I usually do 30-50% daily water for the first 5-7 days, then back off to water changes every 2-3 days for the next week, and then by the 3rd or 4th week I'm closer to the once a week frequency.
This is an amazing video- you give your experience and supplement with other experienced fishkeeper's advice. I had a bit of a disaster on my fiest tankmlast night amd this literally addressed every problem!
I superglue rocks to the bottom of my stem plants to get them to stay down. That's only if I don't cap with sand. If you cap with sand, it shifts into place and holds the plant down as you open your tweezers while still in the sand. For carpeting plants, I put them together in little bundles and push that into the substrate. Works fairly well.
I remember when you didn’t even want to show your face. Now, you are all over the place. I make my own Root Tabs. Mexican Red Clay and crushed Egg Shells, plus I use Aquarium Coop liquid fertilizers. I still enjoy your vids. I enjoyed watching. Thank you for sharing.
We went to the river years ago and scope up gravel for my aquariums. I have used it and reusued it. It works great for plants and fish as that is what is in their natural habitat.
The answer to this depends on which substrate it is. I use Tropica, for example, which are little soil balls. I don't rinse, but I do add water VERY carefully (initially and at water changes) bc it is very lightweight and moves around a lot. I do gravel vac it, but again, with care. Sometimes I loose a little bit of the soil into the bucket, but it isn't too bad.
For the root tabs I use a needle to poke a hole in either side. It lets the air get out and it doesn’t float With my plants, I twist my tweezers back and forth before letting go. It gets the gravel to fill in space
Good tips. I wish i had watched it before i started my 60-gallon cube. Oh well, part of becoming good at something is some failure in the beginning. One thing i did is use mesh bags, and besides being difficult to plant things, I'm not sure it's going to work tempted to tear it down and start over.I guess I will see. God bless you!
I know it's not exactly substrate related, but for those of us with smaller tanks (5 gal) and no patience who just spend the extra money on carpet plants on mesh, can we just set those on top of the substrate? Or do we have to remove it from the mesh first? Will the mesh rust and lower water quality? Would the same thing happen with plant weights? Will fish get injured on the mesh? If you do buy the carpet mesh and absolutely have to remove it, what is the best/easiest way to plant it? Or is there just no quick way to do it and I have to plant in little patches throughout? Which is fine, of course, ultimately I just want something that looks good, but is still safe for whatever ends up going in there.
So many questions but i Dont want to push my luck . How often How often do I vacuum the gravel every time I do a water change every second time every third time also if I’m growing a few plants but I always need to use fertilizer if my substrate is just gravel I have seven Tetris two dwarf Gourami and a mystery snail ? Love your videos
Have you tried tanks w/mixed medium? (esp something like sand/gravel with plant soil like Fluval Stratum) Fluval says the tank should be only Stratum, but I want natural stones, too. Tho, I'm wondering about cleaning aquarium soils. Appreciate anyone's comments on this.
The two tweezer method is so simple yet something I have never thought of. I have used both the DIY osmocote root tab and Aquarium Co-op root tabs and in my personal experience, the Co-op root tabs are superior.
I used aqua clay topped with a shell grit/sand mixture which I then topped with a not-to-thick layer of pool filter sand in my re-setup of a 145-litre tank. I couldn't be happier with the experiment. 😊👍
I just use a true organic potting soil, with worm castings. I also use a form of modified Dry start method. I avoid ugly tank phase, and the water cycles quickly. My WaterBox aquariums rock the clarity 😀
I always use an under substrate heated cable these are around 20watt they just keep water flowing through the substrate a bit like slow under gravel filtration you don't get problems with nutrients leaking up into the water column they all head down towards the plant roots it's always advised not to use this heater as the sole source of heating although I have used it short term for this😊
I Grind up Osmocote in a coffee grinder and put that in a gel cap. I was sick of seeing Osmocote balls being unearthed. I assume it is more potent ground up, so I only put a few around my sword plants occasionally. I’m a fan of flourish tabs for micronutrients when I can find them on sale.
I tend to just use aquarium gravel since its really good for plant root growth and more places for beneficial bacteria to grow. This is really helpful for my future aquascape.
I totally was planning on using gravel for that tank behind me when I got rid of the sand, but decided to use up the rest of my Eco-Complete first. Nothing wrong with gravel!
*Need more planted tank hacks? Check out my whole series of "5 things I wish I knew" about planted aquariums:* ua-cam.com/play/PLlBBJ7xBuqub-rl6z7cnGfSp_rUoyGN0U.html
Its gonna die I really don't want to find the fish dead but no one has answered my question directly by that time it would be dead way too late & have died pleal(
I think you should make a list of nano fishes for beginners.
I really enjoy watching your awesome videos. I do have a question for you on soil substrate. I watch a video of Cory from Aquarium CO-OP and he mentioned that soil based substrates eventually get depleted of nutrients. That being said soils have high CEC therefore they shouldn’t run out of nutrients? Would they not be able to absorb it from the water column?
And last indefinitely? Thanks
Thanks
How long does it take for the water to clear up after adding substrate I used one like yours
Girl talks fish mentioned me.....I've made it 😁 (thanks for the shout out 👍)
I was thinking the same thing... I was like hey! I watch MD Fish Tanks and he totally does this.
I've totally been binging your content recently! Lots of love for your low tech aquascapes. 😍
Two mentions MD, my eyebrows went up when I heard his name
We always knew you'd make it eventually!!!..........LOL :)
@@GirlTalksFish thank you 😊
Another note for those pesky plants that love to float out of the substrate: let them grow longer roots, bundle the roots together and push them down into the substrate, then drag in a direction where you have room. This forces a line of roots under the soil and pulls the plant's base down into the substrate. This is especially effective in coarser substrates with more depth.
Oh I totally forgot to mention that trick! Thank you so much for mentioning it. And much appreciation for your previous helpful comment that I ended up referring to in this video. :)
Not a criticism, more of a question: I would have thought the opposite about the roots. Cut them short and lightly anchor the plant in place. If the plant is healthy it will quickly want to regrow its roots and they will make their way into the substrate and become better anchored.
I have always been of the impression that if a plant already has a substantial root system then it’s roots will grow much more slowly and will take longer to become anchored. Wouldn’t this work better? Or am I missing something?
@@aaronws9561 if the roots are too small to hold it down, growing them out to act as an anchor helps, if they have very long roots, you can trim to 1.5-2" to anchor but encourage new growth
I go bare bottom with Aquponic.
Less hassle
@@BentleyPascoe what would you recommend bundling them together with?
Your the most straight forward aquarium owner I know. You make it way easier for me to go off and do my own research about individual topics without feeling overwhelmed
When putting aquarium coop's root tabs in your tank,put a pin hole in the end of the root tab and it will not float. Makes it MUCH easier.
Oh yeah, I forgot that trick! Thanks so much for mentioning for others to read. 😊
Thank you havent used them yet but just got them in the mail
Omg brilliant!!♥️♥️
@@GirlTalksFish no problem. Anything I learn from cory is my duty to pass on.
Poisons the tank.
Really enjoy your videos. As a 67 yr old grandma who has had aquariums off and on for many years, things change, and I have learned so much from your videos, so I subscribed. Keep up the excellent work, and I will review your previous videos and look forward to the next one! By the way, your children are precious.
I actually watch MD Fishtanks and other channels you mention that are well developed. But I really appreciate your videos! You make it feel more understandable and achievable for a hobbyist who will have just like 1 or 2 tanks.
For sure I’m wanting to start one tank I bought, but it’s proving to be expensive and confusing.
Pro tip:
You are doing fine going slow. Research...then sit with it.
I started a 4' build project 3 months ago.
I am still buying/procuring/preparing the things I need.
Typically, it takes me 8 months from first purchase to actually getting water in the tank, so I have everything right the first time.
I've kept aquariums since 1975....
Take your time and enjoy it, your plants and fish will thank you... and it will be stress reducing as the hobby was originally intended.
fantastic reminder, thank you for sharing! wonderful to hear that you've been in the hobby so long and are still taking it slow and enjoying :)
I've trusted Aquarium Co-Op and Cory for YEARS. Happy to add you to my list of trusted aquarists!
Glad to see im not only person having a trust list. When i was just beginning i literally had it written on a paper
The method I use for planting is that I dig a shallow pit, then I plant it in the middle of that pit. Then I push the displaced substrate back into the pit, which purposefully buries the plant too deeply in the substrate. Finally, I gently pull on the plant to bring it up to the right height. This really secures the plant in, and it apparently also positions the roots more naturally. It does involve getting both your arms in the tank but I don't mind.
Yes! That's exactly what I do when I use my hands. Thanks for describing it so eloquently. I just wish my 20 gallon high tank wasn't so deep. :P
@@GirlTalksFish I'm barely 5'... all tanks are too deep, lol
@@Lazy_Fish_Keeper haha samee
I did a LOT of research for what substrate to use for my planted nano tank (15 gal). I chose crushed lava rock for my bottom layer, inert Eco Complete for middle, topped with med course sand. I use root tabs for rooted plants and Easy Green liquid for the floating water column plants. So far quite happy with my results.
fishkeeping and aquascaping is really really fun. should've started this hobby many years ago.
It's very important that I watch this. I have absolutely no plans to ever start an aquarium (I'm just not in a stable life position for it) but I need to understand planted aquarium substrates. Why? You ask. Because it's important!
If you're never going to have an aquarium then learning a bunch about aquariums is technically a waste of your time, but it is interesting enough to want to learn just for the sake of knowledge
One common thing i did from the internet is to put normal organic potting mix at the bottom and cap it off with a thicc layer of your cheap substrate. Unless you want algae fun-fest, don't let the soil seep to the water column. It works for me, so might as well share it to other peeps who may not know what a dirted tank is.
Good organic Canadian sphagnum peat for the tannin and soft water lovers.
Irene, for the carpeting plants I do something similar to MD. I use a drop of crazy glue to attach the grass to a small pebble and wedge it at soil level. ☺️
The great thing about GTF is that she keeps her videos visually interesting, which so many fish videos don't do
To keep plants down, I put a small rock w an elastic to the roots. It's way easier, and wont mess up dirted tank as much. Less damage to the roots too, dont have to keep smushing them back down
Wish I knew to go deeper with my substrate. Adding more substrate in a fully planted tank is a pain in the backside.
Look at, The Secret History living inside your tank. He have a video on it. 😊
I'm grateful I went deep despite the longer cycling and trickier initial balancing. 'Treat it like a plant.' Now, learn lasagna gardening ABOVE ground- now, you can think of aquascaping!
It's not really that big of a deal.
@@voluntaryismistheanswer I never connected how similar the 2 are!
Thank you for sharing, now I have a better reference when I am teaching people about either.
@@csharpe5787 I will need to check that out. One of the reasons I have usually kept my substrate a bit thinner is to avoid anaerobic pockets. Does the video cover dealing with this problem?
Tips for planting a hex tank: put on a bathing suit, stand on a chair, plunge half your body in the water while holding the plant with your hand so you can reach the bottom. Make sure you have towels down so you dont drip all over the floor when you come up for air. 😂
😂 I am at that state and love it so much I'm buying a new one on CL
🤣🤣🤣
So much truth, lol
I love the “gravel base, sand topper” tip! I find that sand is really good at keeping new plants in place. Also, I definitely use the 2 tweezer tip!
Haha, I'm glad to hear I'm not the only crazy one using 2 tweezers.
Me too.
💯
I use wooden chop sticks. Can't stand the thought of cold metal pressed against my plants.
I think I'm gonna use that method for my tank
Glad to hear MD fish tanks mentioned
Possibly the most informative video under 10 minutes ever made 🙌🐠🐟🌱‼️
Excellent excellent excellent. Thanks Irene. I’m having all those problems with tweezers, roots, and root tabs. I’m afraid to grab the root tabs too hard because they break (happened yesterday). I’m afraid to grab the plant stems too hard with the tweezers because it can cut through the stems. Thanks for giving us permission to just use the ultimate tweezers - our fingers!
There was a lot of relief with that one! 😄
I'm that person using soil from my own compost pile mixed with gravel then topped with something decorative to help keep it all in place.
Definitely reccomend many water changes and time before adding animals if doing this! I think I'll be using the frozen dirt idea in future though! I've always relied on liquid aquarium fertilizer as tabs floating away annoys me.
Good video, one thing that's really helped me is plant weights. they're doing well for me in a new tank with Fluval Stratum. It's so lightweight and coarse, it doesn't hold anything in easily. It's REALLY frustrating trying to get rotala or staurogyne to stay in the dirt, I got plant weights from buceplant, very cheap strips of a very soft non reactive metal. I just cut a tiny little strip the size of a brad nail off with scissors, and squeeze it onto the stem. Just a tiny bit of weight reduces the buoyancy so plants won't float away, and the strip of metal acts like an anchor to boot. If you're done playing aquarium plant whack-a-mole, get some weights and be done with it, so glad I found them.
Finally! someone talks about the difficulty of planting plants!
Always informative 👍 love the shout out to md
Thank you for this, I was gifted a 20 gallon tank and putting a game plan together. I’m going to layer the eco sub with a sand on top or eco where I plant only. Way to may options on what to do with a tank but I usually do a tank with what I have on hand. I got some beautiful colorful rocks and stones from Lake Ontario, driftwood from my Cabin lake in Belgrade Lakes, Maine. Rocks were just cleaned and sanitized, driftwood next.
I watched you as a beginner and now that i have had a tank for 4 months I have a much better appreciation of your tanks and tips. Nice work!
Do you find that vacuuming your gravel is necessary? And if so, how do you avoid vacuuming your finer substrates (like if you use sand)?
I like the idea of the carpeting plant being planted into the substrate. Countless hours trying to replant little bunches of hairgrass. The green wool-like stuff the plants come in are ok to leave in the fish tank. . . Indefinitely?
Thank you! Great tips and so nice of you to mention MD Fish Tanks and Cory of Aquarium Co-op.
Hearing the first tip made me so relieved. I began an aquarium a few weeks ago and as all my plants started rapidly growing, I realised a carpet would just put the whole thing together. Sadly, due to the price, I could only get sand as my substrate and relied on tab and liquid fertilisers. I was told there was no hope in growing a carpet with just sand, but I think now I'm confident to give it a try.
You should make your take like half sand and half gravel so you can grow different stuff
@@favian8435 actually that's a good idea, thanks :)
sweet tank, I like how everyone is getting along in peace.
Great video! Mentioning other You tubers was a great way to utilize other peoples methods, love it!
Yes, there is so much great information out there and I love learning from others. I try to give credit whenever I can remember the source.
Love these videos. I am learning so much as this is my first time planting live plants. My wife doesn’t like them much but I think they look great! Thanks for making these videos!
Great info again! Love your videos. With root tabs, you can use a plastic tubes a plexiglass rod. Get one that's about the size of the diameter of the gel-tab. Push the gel-tab into the tube, and stab that into the substrate at a 45-degree angle, and use the plexiglass rod to pushed the tab into the substrate.
Another tip. To prevent the gel-tabs from floating by poking a hole in it with a safety pin 🧷
Niiiice! I'm going to have to make one of these and try it out because I use root tabs in all of my tanks.
I just love listening to you, you cut straight to the point, you really know what you're talking about and you always come about with such great tips and tricks. A huge plus is also your personality and voice, perfect for making videos! You're brilliant :)
Love your tshirt. I usually cap my substrate with sand. It’s easier for me to plant in.
Capping is everything lol
Haha I’m back watching this video for a third time since it was uploaded and yet again taking away newly learned skills. Thanks so much, I just had to comment as this has been a great help!!
For planting carpeting plants: get some thin plastic coated gardening wire (garden centres sell them in reels) and cut many 2 inch lengths. Bend the top 5th back around and voila: mini tent pegs that keep your carpeting plants secure until they take root then simply remove. :)
I agree the whole add this stuff every x amount of time thing makes no sense. Watch your plants carefully and they will tell you what time it is. After a while you will note more or less of a rythm too it. Cut that period slythly shorter et voila. I have had tanks where every month was required and in other situations i got away with twice a year. In our hobby " it depends" is a good part of the answer for many if not most of the questions.
There's too many variables, it's like a recipe- if you are a novice it's a roadmap, don't veer!, but if you grasp the basics, it's unnecessary as me needing one to bake bread. You observe, and react accordingly.
😲OMG I've learned so much in just this one video. I have a ten gallon planter and have been having issues. I am subscribing for more, thank you
Your videos have helped me out so much with my 10 gal.. in about a year my friend is moving away and leaving his 40 gal. with me, that substrate cost will get pretty expensive so where I can cut the costs I probably will.
What substrate are your using for your 10 gal?
What wonderful information on a big topic!! I do use some expensive Aqua soils sometimes... I've also gone with capping it with 3 in of sand... It really does wonders ♥️👍
Really great points on the mulm!!
Thank you for covering root tabs and fertilizers!!
And I also love that you covered the different types of plants and how to plant them 👍♥️🌿
Oh my goodness use two sets of tweezers 👍😂 best tip ever!!!!!
Brilliant 😂👍♥️
I aways wondered about the rockwool thanks for that tip too 🤗
Love your videos Irene thank you so much for all you do and share!! I hope you have a very blessed day and a Happy Valentine day!!!♥️👍🌿🐟🌿🙏
Yay, so glad you enjoyed the video! Thank you so much for spending the time to comment on my content. I see how much time and effort you put into writing them, and I'm so happy to know that you like my channel. :)
All your tank settings are so beautiful! Its like a magical forest vibe. You should add like a fake decor of a redhead mushroom. I think it will look extremely cute
nice tips on the 2 x Tweazer trick, the 45 degree angle technique, and growing out Monte Carlo carpet grass from anchored spots. Thanks!
Thanks for the amazing content.
For some plants that end up floating and don't need to be necessarily rooted, I find putting them in a seashell works really well and matches the aesthetic
I actually used compost in the bottom of the tank, and just scooped off any of the floating materials after a few days. My tank is a completely crazy biosphere. I did about 2 inches of compost and covered with rock dust and sand. This tank can handle a ungodly amount of fish with minimal amounts of water filtration. I've not done a water change in years. I just refill from evaporation.
Great video! You hit all the points I was curious about.... I started a pandemic 45gal planted tank with guidance from good fish store. I did it right with the substrate, cycle, timed light, co2, liquid fertilizer etc. It was amazing until a few months ago where diff types of plants would either flourish or die off. Plants with biggest root system would do best. I've stayed steady with maintenance. Im thinking my substrate nutrients are used up?.... Just moved so now I get to relaunch the tank properly. Put all the plants in buckets. Have the fish in a 10gal for now using the same filter. I heavily vacuumed the gravel nefore removal and kept 20gal of the old tank water. Do you think fertilizer tabs would revitalize?
I love the pasión of how you explain everything.
Just a note I wanted to share about root tabs floating, I found that sticking a pin hole in the ends helps when I put them in the substrate.
This is my first video of yours I've watched and I found it to be very be informative. I accidentally stumbled across it. I also found comfort with you mentioning Aquarium Co op. I plan on checking out your other videos now too! Thank you so much for taking the time to share.☺️
I enjoyed your video... it's nice to see another female in the hobbie! I've had high nutrient substrate for some time now with a heavily planted tank and now thinking of putting the nutrient substrate into mesh media bags and then cover with gravel and top up with natural light sand, as MD does in some of his videos. I'm tired of the algae from the nutrients and I dont have time for water changes very often, especially being a large tank (250L). Thanks for validating the high nutrient soil and algae.
Thanks for this great tutorial, when you say do frequent or daily water changes, how much of the water? 10%, 50%? At the moment I just have regular aquarium gravel and the plants are doing great. Thumbs up as always :)
Thanks for the comment! Depends on how "potent" the substrate is, but I usually do 30-50% daily water for the first 5-7 days, then back off to water changes every 2-3 days for the next week, and then by the 3rd or 4th week I'm closer to the once a week frequency.
Clay balls are another way of getting nutrients to heavy root feeders, they are working great on my Cryptocoryne's and Swords.
This is an amazing video- you give your experience and supplement with other experienced fishkeeper's advice. I had a bit of a disaster on my fiest tankmlast night amd this literally addressed every problem!
All ive learned for my aquarium ive learned from you thank you irene
Just got myself pearlscale goldfish and im starting my aquascaping after my fish have established. Thanks for all the great tips!💚
Wait what, that's not the right order.
I superglue rocks to the bottom of my stem plants to get them to stay down. That's only if I don't cap with sand. If you cap with sand, it shifts into place and holds the plant down as you open your tweezers while still in the sand. For carpeting plants, I put them together in little bundles and push that into the substrate. Works fairly well.
Very informative as always.❤️
For the algorithm! Keep up the good work. And thanks for the KH help on the CO-OP forum!
I remember when you didn’t even want to show your face. Now, you are all over the place. I make my own Root Tabs. Mexican Red Clay and crushed Egg Shells, plus I use Aquarium Coop liquid fertilizers. I still enjoy your vids. I enjoyed watching. Thank you for sharing.
2 pairs of tweezers at once! What genius! Thank you.
Yay, you found it helpful. I was afraid people would think I was crazy. 😂
We went to the river years ago and scope up gravel for my aquariums.
I have used it and reusued it. It works great for plants and fish as that is what is in their natural habitat.
Amazing tank really beautiful😃👍💖
How do we clean planted tank substrate? Do you gravel vac it? Do you pre rinse it beforehand?
You cap it lol. What a mess some are!
The answer to this depends on which substrate it is. I use Tropica, for example, which are little soil balls. I don't rinse, but I do add water VERY carefully (initially and at water changes) bc it is very lightweight and moves around a lot. I do gravel vac it, but again, with care. Sometimes I loose a little bit of the soil into the bucket, but it isn't too bad.
For the root tabs I use a needle to poke a hole in either side. It lets the air get out and it doesn’t float
With my plants, I twist my tweezers back and forth before letting go. It gets the gravel to fill in space
That explains why I've been having trouble with all my carpeting plants!
I love your videos ❤ I’m starting with this hobby and it’s been really nice finding girls to follow and learn from ❤
For a nano tank, you can get away with 2L of ADA Amazonia, with pumice/lava rock on the bottom as the substrate. Thanks for the video.
Crushing bbq pumice stones is cheap filler, everyone needs a pick for their ohko anyways lol. It floats, so CAP HARD
Good tips. I wish i had watched it before i started my 60-gallon cube. Oh well, part of becoming good at something is some failure in the beginning. One thing i did is use mesh bags, and besides being difficult to plant things, I'm not sure it's going to work tempted to tear it down and start over.I guess I will see. God bless you!
My favorite tip is putting your hand behind something small to make your camera focus on it. 4:58
I know it's not exactly substrate related, but for those of us with smaller tanks (5 gal) and no patience who just spend the extra money on carpet plants on mesh, can we just set those on top of the substrate? Or do we have to remove it from the mesh first? Will the mesh rust and lower water quality? Would the same thing happen with plant weights? Will fish get injured on the mesh? If you do buy the carpet mesh and absolutely have to remove it, what is the best/easiest way to plant it? Or is there just no quick way to do it and I have to plant in little patches throughout? Which is fine, of course, ultimately I just want something that looks good, but is still safe for whatever ends up going in there.
YES I use CO OP Aquarium products too! And follow his youtube! :D
Oh, and I use those small rubber bands for bracers to hold down my plants.
Just the video I was looking for…thanks for sharing!!
So many questions but i Dont want to push my luck . How often How often do I vacuum the gravel every time I do a water change every second time every third time also if I’m growing a few plants but I always need to use fertilizer if my substrate is just gravel I have seven Tetris two dwarf Gourami and a mystery snail ? Love your videos
Have you tried tanks w/mixed medium? (esp something like sand/gravel with plant soil like Fluval Stratum) Fluval says the tank should be only Stratum, but I want natural stones, too. Tho, I'm wondering about cleaning aquarium soils. Appreciate anyone's comments on this.
You really do your research. And I enjoy listening to you. Great video. Liked😉
The two tweezer method is so simple yet something I have never thought of. I have used both the DIY osmocote root tab and Aquarium Co-op root tabs and in my personal experience, the Co-op root tabs are superior.
Where do you find tweezers that length?
The big pair I got from Amazon ( amzn.to/3jPCqon ) and the small pair I got from Aquarium Co-Op ( www.aquariumcoop.com/products/planting-tweezers ).
@@GirlTalksFish thanks so much, I've been loving your videos by the way!! I'm new here and they're so helpful ☺
All your videos are so helpful!
Superb presentation and knowledge 👍🏻🙏🏻
Great tips, thank you. Also +1 for use of the word 'mulm'! and great to see kuhlii loaches!
thank you! 🙏 you just helped me with my decision, which saved a lot of time 😅
I used aqua clay topped with a shell grit/sand mixture which I then topped with a not-to-thick layer of pool filter sand in my re-setup of a 145-litre tank. I couldn't be happier with the experiment. 😊👍
I just use a true organic potting soil, with worm castings. I also use a form of modified Dry start method. I avoid ugly tank phase, and the water cycles quickly. My WaterBox aquariums rock the clarity 😀
Yep, cheap and easy
Cool video! Thanks!🤘🤘
Great vid. Thanks!
Thanks for uploading a video about what substrate is best 2 hours after I put my substrate in.
Murphy's law 😂
@@GirlTalksFish lol
Hundreds of my dirted substrate tanks have lasted for 8 years and more. Please try this system. I promise you will be amazed.
What soil do you use?
Really love your videos! They are very informative!
I use Fluval Stratum but when I have fish that can’t tolerate the low ph, I use a mix of gravel and fluorite gravel
Nice! I'm glad you found a mix that works well.
I always use an under substrate heated cable these are around 20watt they just keep water flowing through the substrate a bit like slow under gravel filtration you don't get problems with nutrients leaking up into the water column they all head down towards the plant roots it's always advised not to use this heater as the sole source of heating although I have used it short term for this😊
Hello! Love the channel! Can you tell me which tank that is @ 1:20? I want the same one! Thank you!
tips on adding new substrate to an established tank? i domt think my substrate is deep enough
I Grind up Osmocote in a coffee grinder and put that in a gel cap. I was sick of seeing Osmocote balls being unearthed. I assume it is more potent ground up, so I only put a few around my sword plants occasionally.
I’m a fan of flourish tabs for micronutrients when I can find them on sale.
5:20 Omg new baby cories?😍 I should buy a school of them too😍
I just found a baby cory swimming around in my tank. Corys are so fun to watch. I was inspired by Irene's cory videos.
Yes, the albino corys are really easy to breed! The babies are just too cute.
Hydroton, which is a heated clay pebble/ball is an amazing base layer substrate and doesn't need a topping.
Invaluable tips, thank you
I tend to just use aquarium gravel since its really good for plant root growth and more places for beneficial bacteria to grow. This is really helpful for my future aquascape.
I totally was planning on using gravel for that tank behind me when I got rid of the sand, but decided to use up the rest of my Eco-Complete first. Nothing wrong with gravel!
@@GirlTalksFish is using just gravel ok or should I use a layer of eco complete or organic soil topped with the gravel