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Caring for Pond Plants

Tabletop Water Gardens

Saturday, June 13th, 2009
bog plants thrive when planted in drilled rocks, such as the red lava rock, green sandstone and rainbow sandstone shown here.

bog plants thrive when planted in drilled rocks, such as the red lava rock, green sandstone and rainbow sandstone shown here.

Here’s a great way to include bog plants in all sorts of unusual places. These tiny tabletop water gardens can be featured as centerpieces on your table (indoors or out), can sit in a sunny spot on a counter or windowsill, or can liven up a bird bath or shallow water container.

Tabletop water gardens are a piece of cake to set up and care for. You will need:

  1. a rock with a drilled hole through it
  2. a small or dwarf bog plant
  3. some moss or planting medium
  4. a shallow water-tight container (even a pie dish will work)

Even better, our table-top water garden kits include the rock, plant and planting medium, which means you only need to find a container.

Once you have everything you need, you can assemble your tabletop water garden in just a few minutes. Just three steps:

    This tabletop water garden includes red lava rock, a pitcher plant and some moss

    This tabletop water garden includes red lava rock, a pitcher plant and some moss

  1. Prepare your kit. Remove your kit from the packing materials, and prepare the plant, rock and growing medium. If your plant is potted, remove it from the pot and gently remove some of the old growing medium.<br>
  2. Plant your rock. Wrap some of the new growing medium around the plant’s roots and gently insert the root mass into the hole in the rock. Be sure that the growing medium extends to the base of the hole. Use the remaining growing medium to fill in around the top and bottom of the hole.<br>
  3. Place in a dish of water. Any dish or container that holds water will work fine. Just be sure that the water level always extends about an inch or so up the height of the rock (more is fine). The rock will slowly absorb water, keeping the roots evenly moist.

And you’re done!

We offer three styles of rock and several suitable plants through our online pond plant store.

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Koi safe pond plants

Saturday, April 18th, 2009

Koi love pond plants. They especially love to eat pond plants. But, there’s hope. Here are a few of our favorite tricks for keeping koi and aquatic plants in your backyard pond. Whatever you try, remember that every koi is different. These tricks have fooled our koi, but that doesn’t mean they will fool your koi too.

Create a koi-free zone for your water plants. Use chicken wire or heavy plastic netting to fence off an area of your pond, creating a koi-free safe zone for your pond plants. Take time to ensure that there are no holes or weak points where your koi can slip through. For best results, allow the fencing material to extend above the water’s surface an inch or two. Finally, be careful to use heavy gauge netting or fencing — the fine bird netting could catch and tangle your fishes’ fins.

If you have the space, you can take this idea one step further, and actually construct a second pond for your plants. A small pond sited above your koi pond will keep your plants safely away from the koi, and will also give you the opportunity to incorporate a waterfall or stream into your backyard water garden.

Use floating plant baskets to protect delicate floating and oxygenating plants. Empty pond plant baskets will float right at the water’s surface, creating a floating barrier between your pond plants and the hungry koi. This is a great way to combine floating plantswater hyacinth, water lettuce, frogbit, water poppy — with koi. This technique also works for submerged and oxygenating plants, such as anacharis, parrot’s feather or bacopa. Take care: aggressive koi may figure out how to tip the baskets, and water falls or fountains could flip the baskets too.

Grow koi safe pond plants. Koi will eat almost anything, but thick-stemmed water plants are generally pretty safe. Lotus, umbrella palm, cattail and other sturdy reeds and rushes can often withstand their hungry assaults. Less-aggessive koi may even let you grow water lilies. Some koi will dig up pond plant roots, so you may want to protect your plants by covering their pots with thick wire or heavy stones.

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Picking the best site for your pond plants

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

Location, location, location… Pond plants really do have preferences for their ideal location in your water garden. (more…)

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