Thread: Hydroleca
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Old 17-08-2014, 11:02 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Bob Hobden Bob Hobden is offline
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Default Hydroleca

"Spider" wrote

Bob Hobden wrote:
"Spider" wrote
Thanks, David, that's a good tip. I've usually lined my aquatic pots
with torn up old tee shirts (there's a limit to how many dusters one
can use!), which keeps the soil in place, but I'll investigate cabbage
nets.
I'm not sure I'd want to eat and paddle in water I'd just soiled! At
least chick poo pellets are sterilised. I'll not be too worried, then.

A pet beef of mine is the pots they sell for water plants covered in
holes so the soil washes out. Do water plants need drainage holes? I
think not. Recently I have seen some lily pots that are solid so don't
need a liner at all, actually you could use a bin from a pound shop, I
have on occasion. For example RHS Wisley and others use half dustbins.




I know what you mean; it is rather frustrating. On one hand, I see the
roots growing through the mesh pots and am pleased the plant is growing and
flourishing; on the other, when I come to pot on that plant and have to
tear many roots to free it from the old pot, I am not so pleased. I'd
always assumed the 'escaping' roots were searching for oxygen or food, and
wonder if they could do that efficiently enough in a solid pot. However,
if you're seeing water lilies in solid pots, then it makes me wonder.

My wee little water lily doesn't need anything like even half a dustbin!
It's a tiny one (Nymphaea Odorata Firecrest) to suit my tiny pond. I also
have a Nymphoides peltata and the ubiquitous Iris pseudoacorus. Although
the pond is on two levels, it's quite small, so I'm doing well to get that
much plant material in it. In the lower level, which is very shallow, I
have a few marginal/bog plants.

I do wish I had a huge pond, so I could have more fish and lots more
plants, but short of digging the house up, I'm not sure where it would go!


Iris pseudoacorus is a bit of a thug and can get to be a problem especially
in a small pond. I composted my "variegata" and got some nice smaller water
iris. Iris laevigata comes in many colours and forms and is never invasive
and will look more in keeping with a small pond.
Nymphoides peltata can grow quickly and may become a problem eventually.

--
Regards. Bob Hobden.
Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK