if you got it...let me know. we can make a deal. I would prefer it already be on slate, but if its not then thats fine as well
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LF: two pieces of Driftwood.
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Re: LF: two pieces of Driftwood.
I think all it does is make your tank look nice, and gives fish a place to hide. The slate keeps the driftwood from floating.Originally posted by jeff";p="Why is driftwood so popular. Is there something I should know? And driftwood on slate????Fish are people too, they just have gills.
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Re: LF: two pieces of Driftwood.
Some driftwood is naturally denser and sinks on it's own, mopani and old black wood come to mind, you usually pay more for it. Other natural driftwood will sink on it's own after a period of time (usually) or you can hasten the sinking process by boiling it. Other than giving a natural setting, plecos love to rasp on it as Semper said and most plants will easily root to it. Having a non-naturally sinking driftwood attached to slate makes it easier to plan out your tank. The other option to non sinking wood is to weight it down with rocks until it stays down on it's own. I have a huge piece that is slowing but surely starting to sink, only been working on it for a year nowOriginally posted by jeff";p="Why is driftwood so popular. Is there something I should know? And driftwood on slate????
. Meanwhile, my discus like to take it easy under the branches.
Reasoning with some people is like trying to nail jello to a wall...
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