How to Choose Water Garden Plants
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by: Brett Fogle
So the water garden bug has bitten. You’ve dug and
leveled and sweated and said words you hope that no one else has heard.
Now it’s time for the fun part – picking out your water garden plants!
Plant varieties within these four categories are what
you need to eyeball: deep-water, marginals, oxygenators, and floaters.
(If you think these words are big words, just be happy we’re not
talking about medicine.)
After you’ve diligently planted your new plants in
plastic tubs, pans, or clay pots, packing the fertilizer- and
chemical-free soil down tightly, load the container down with pea
gravel to keep the soil from floating away. (Don’t ask why this works,
but it does.) Plunk your plant into the water at the appropriate depth
(You’ll read about that in just a minute) and you’re on ready to go!
Plant-dunking should be generally be done during the
growing season. For new ponds, wait four or five weeks for the water
plants to do their thing before you add your fish. If you just can’t
hold your horses, or your fish, for that long, you can jump the gun a
couple of weeks, but the idea is to let the plants first get
established.
When picking your plants, you’ll no doubt be wowed by
water lilies of the tropical persuasion. These aquatic wonders are
popular compared to their hardier cousins with knock-out fragrance, big
blooms day or night – depending on the variety – and a habit of
blooming their little hearts out nearly every day during the growing
season. They love their warmth, though, so unless you live in a
year-round, warm-weather climate, be prepared to hasten them into a
greenhouse or at least muster up some funds to buy them some “grow”
lights to tough it out through the winter.
They will definitely bite the dust at freezing
temperatures, but give them night-time temps of at least 65F and
daytime temps of 75F or warmer, and your love affair with tropicals
will only grow that much more torrid.
Hardy water lilies, while not the showboaters that
tropicals are, are . . . well, hardier. Their big advantage is that
they can stay in the water year ‘round unless it freezes so deeply the
rootstock is affected. And being the tough guys they are, you can plant
these puppies deeper than the tropicals, some living it up in depths of
8 to 10 feet.
Both hardy and tropical water lilies are real sun
worshippers. At least 5 to 10 hours a day is what it takes, along with
regular fertilization, to keep these plant pals happy.
Everybody and their brother with a water garden wants a
lotus plant. (Sisters, too, no doubt.) These water-lily relatives come
in hardy and not-so-hardy strains, so make sure you know what you’re
buying. Much bigger than water lilies, lotus have huge, famously
splendid blooms that not only will knock your socks off, but make you
forget you have feet altogether. Their leaves and seed pods are so
breathtaking, they’re a favorite in costly cut-flower arrangements.
Big, bold, and beautiful, with water-depth needs of 2-3 feet, these
shouters are really better off in big ponds that get plenty of sun.
Marginals (sometimes called “bog” plants by those less
high-falutin’) are grass-like plants that strut their stuff in shallow
areas no deeper than 6” that border the water garden. They also do well
in mud. Cattail, bamboo, rush, papyrus, and many other plants fall into
the family of marginals and grow best with a minimum of at least three
hours of sun.
Some plants are there but not seen, working stoically
under water and without fanfare to fight algae, oxygenate the water,
and provide food for fish. (In lieu of these plants, if your pond is
small, you can fake it fairly adequately with an aquarium pump.) Easy
on the wallet, varieties of these plants can be bought in bunches and
like their soil sandy and/or gravelly. Like hardy water lilies, they,
too, will warrior it through the winter.
Water hyacinths have become a recent rage, especially
for the lazy among us. No soil is required for these beauties. Toss
them in the water and they’re “planted.” A water hyacinth ain’t just
another pretty face, though; these plants do their part in the war
against algae and blanket weeds by keeping sunlight scarce on the
water’s surface. But one note of caution: This plant may take over the
world if allowed. It’s invasive as all get out, so keep it under
control or you (and your neighbors) may wish you’d never laid eyes on
it.
A water garden isn't a garden without plants. Take your
time, know your climate, and choose wisely. Your rewards will be great
in return.
To read the full article, click here:
http://www.macarthurwatergardens.com/Newsletters/July2004/pond-plant-selection.shtml
Article source: Serverforever.com
About the Author
Brett Fogle is the owner of MacArthur Water Gardens and several pond-related websites including macarthurwatergardens.com and pond-filters-online.com. He also publishes a free monthly newsletter called PondStuff! with a reader circulation of over 9,000 pond owners. To sign up for the free newsletter and receive a complimentary 'New Pond Owners Guide' for joining, just visit MacArthur Water Gardens at www.macarthurwatergardens.com.
brett@macarthurwatergardens.com
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