The number one factor that matters for this is the mineral content of the water source. If you are somewhere like Portland, or have a lot of rain you can harvest to fill a pond, then there's little problem with it. If you are filling the pond from a well or tap water over 100 tds, then its probably doomed to fail. As said the fish don't produce enough waste to be a problem, and using low mineral/no mineral water isn't a problem because the peat moss will help keep the PH stable for the fish. Some fish definitely don't appreciate soft water, but there are plenty that will work.
Plants use up the calcium and potassium. They will also eat the ammonia, nitrite and nitrate and the copper and other stuff. The aquatic plants I mean not the flytraps and pitchers lol. Algae, moss and column feeders rather than root feeders in the water are really good for softening the water and making it more acidic. You can always test the mineral content before using the water for your other plants. My aquarium water works great and my tap water is too hard. It depends on how well established your ecosystem is and what you add to it.
Thanks for the video! I try this year to put some carnivour plants il my natural swimming pond after learned that some of them was hardy about -10 °c. Very happy to see that's work 😊
Thanks for watching! Make sure to also watch our vid on winter care. You can find it in the Volume 1 playlist on our website. www.growcarnivorousplants.com/carnivorous-plant-videos/
This video is talking about using pond water since the plants are growing in the pond. But if you're not doing that, then use distilled water, reverse osmosis water, or rain water.
We would love to help you out. Visit our website and submit your growing question to Ask The Growers. Supply information about your care, and one of our growers will get back to you. www.growcarnivorousplants.com/ask-the-growers/ I also recommend watching our Volume 3 playlist. It is all about Nepenthes. www.growcarnivorousplants.com/carnivorous-plant-videos/
try certain bacteria as they naturally secrete a chemical that kills the larve and no it is not toxic to humans besides aquatic organisms tend to be a bit more susceptible to poison bad PH and pathogens so even just putting in a small amount of isopropanol that would evaporate the next day could work but not if you intend to keep plants and fish alive anyway if you have some irrational fear of chemicals with complex or long names just remember you are literally made of them
you treat water for fishtanks with water conditioner, it removes heavy metals also if you leave a cup of water out for 24 hours apparently the bad shit evaporates then you can water sensitive plants (venus fly trap, bamboo, ect) so id assume same deal with the fishtank
Bogs don't have fishes, maybe some killi in some bigger hole but thats all. And the plants live in soft water wirh nearly zero minerals. While even fish who live in soft acidic water need some minerals.
@@thombaz come to Florida where these plants grow wild on the edge of 20 acre cypress dome swamps with bass, bream gators and snakes and a whole ecosystem living right up on them they should be fine
The number one factor that matters for this is the mineral content of the water source. If you are somewhere like Portland, or have a lot of rain you can harvest to fill a pond, then there's little problem with it. If you are filling the pond from a well or tap water over 100 tds, then its probably doomed to fail. As said the fish don't produce enough waste to be a problem, and using low mineral/no mineral water isn't a problem because the peat moss will help keep the PH stable for the fish. Some fish definitely don't appreciate soft water, but there are plenty that will work.
Plants use up the calcium and potassium. They will also eat the ammonia, nitrite and nitrate and the copper and other stuff. The aquatic plants I mean not the flytraps and pitchers lol. Algae, moss and column feeders rather than root feeders in the water are really good for softening the water and making it more acidic. You can always test the mineral content before using the water for your other plants. My aquarium water works great and my tap water is too hard. It depends on how well established your ecosystem is and what you add to it.
Had them in my pond for year's. In UK Doing great
Thanks for the video! I try this year to put some carnivour plants il my natural swimming pond after learned that some of them was hardy about -10 °c. Very happy to see that's work 😊
Thanks for watching! Make sure to also watch our vid on winter care. You can find it in the Volume 1 playlist on our website.
www.growcarnivorousplants.com/carnivorous-plant-videos/
Hi!
I'd really like to see a 'how to do a carnivorous plants rock garden' Video!!! :)
Thanks for this vid!
Already asked me this question, too.
ruclips.net/video/VvBlfJUqlYc/видео.html . Warning: concentrated win ensues.
As long as it's not an aquaponics pond that tend to have an overstocked setting, it's probably fine.
Do they HAVE to be in SOIL in the pond, or can they be at a shallow edge, anchored down with rocks-in a natural clay pond without a liner?
A natural pond would have a lot of nutrients coming from the soil. That would be like growing your plants in soil from your yard.
Is that distilled water or regular tap or ...
Could I go as far as planting the sarracenia in inert medium? Such as finer pea gravel or pumice?
I'd love to know this too!
Good to know! Thank you
Yayy! I was considering one betta for my little bog pool. Maybe I need to test with one drosera first
As long as the water is constantly moving and cleaned it is fine..
@Simon Lu. So it's oxygenated. Not anaerobic.
Great to know. Now I am not worried to put them in mine.
I have a 50 gallon tub with fish. It is okay to put my CP in the same water. I just purchased the Sarracenia x 'Abandoned Hope' (TC) Potted
What about the fish and everything surviving a freeze and overwintering to live in the spring? Does that happen? I'm in E Tx.....
There are fishes that will survive the winter. Koi and gold fishes are types of carp that make it through winter.
This video was SO CUTE! LOVED THIS!
I can use normal water or osmosis water?
This video is talking about using pond water since the plants are growing in the pond.
But if you're not doing that, then use distilled water, reverse osmosis water, or rain water.
Thanks for the videos ! may I ask , in my country , rain falls often , is it ok for the plants ?
nice video brother 👍
put them into floating trunks instead in plastic pots and it will be something...
so they sit in water always? no drainage? Whats the soil like? my first nepenthes is dying here. pls help XD
We would love to help you out. Visit our website and submit your growing question to Ask The Growers. Supply information about your care, and one of our growers will get back to you.
www.growcarnivorousplants.com/ask-the-growers/
I also recommend watching our Volume 3 playlist. It is all about Nepenthes.
www.growcarnivorousplants.com/carnivorous-plant-videos/
Hello!
How high is the ec value of the lake?
What do you use as substrate that is safe for the fish?
Where do you get the large rocks to drill holes in?
Any agriculture fields or like cow fields have plenty of rocks that will do the job
How do you keep mosquitoes out of your nursery pools?
Christy mosquito fish
try certain bacteria as they naturally secrete a chemical that kills the larve and no it is not toxic to humans besides aquatic organisms tend to be a bit more susceptible to poison bad PH and pathogens so even just putting in a small amount of isopropanol that would evaporate the next day could work but not if you intend to keep plants and fish alive anyway if you have some irrational fear of chemicals with complex or long names just remember you are literally made of them
Mosquito dunks for the adults and mosquito bits for the larvae.
Are you using distilled water or regular tapwater or…
you treat water for fishtanks with water conditioner, it removes heavy metals
also if you leave a cup of water out for 24 hours apparently the bad shit evaporates then you can water sensitive plants (venus fly trap, bamboo, ect) so id assume same deal with the fishtank
I would think it’s okay to keep fish with carnivorous plants! Don’t these plants live in bogs in the wild anyway?
Bogs don't have fishes, maybe some killi in some bigger hole but thats all. And the plants live in soft water wirh nearly zero minerals. While even fish who live in soft acidic water need some minerals.
@@thombaz come to Florida where these plants grow wild on the edge of 20 acre cypress dome swamps with bass, bream gators and snakes and a whole ecosystem living right up on them they should be fine
@@TheCarnivoreConnection what kind? I am in central Europe so cant come to Florida right now. :D
5 goldfish in that pond is not a problem.