The aquarium design and construction project reminds everyone that pruning before planting helps to quickly beautify the environment. The purchased aquatic plants should be washed with water first, and dead leaves and rotten roots should be trimmed. Old leaves and long straight roots can also be pruned appropriately. If the plants are too weak, they can be picked moderately to promote more buds to germinate in the future.
Bundles of grass cannot be planted in bundles. The same kind of aquatic plants grow more naturally in bundles, but they should also be divided into individual plants one by one.
In order to facilitate the operation, the water should be drawn out and put in other containers during the aquarium design process (don't forget to turn off all auxiliary facilities first). When planting grass, first dig a hole in the bottom sand, and then use tweezers to vertically clamp the grass. After determining the position and depth, tap the bottom sand around the roots with your fingers or a wooden stick to bury the roots.
Bulb aquatic plants should not be buried too deep. Epiphytic grasses such as moss can be temporarily fixed to rocks and sunken trees with rubber bands. When larger plants are not easy to plant in shallow sand, they can be planted in small pots and then stacked in bottom sand. Do not touch the original equipment in the box during operation.
One is the grass behind and on both sides of the aquarium, which gradually advances to the middle and the front, and the short species is one. Grasses of different colors and shapes should be planted separately, and beautiful grass seeds should be selected in prominent positions.
After planting, the original pumped water is slowly poured into the water tank, and all auxiliary facilities are reopened. The newly planted grass looks dirty and useless. If you follow the plan ahead of time, you don't have to rush to adjust after filling.
After about a week, when aquatic plants begin to grow, they will grow slowly and straight, and this effect will appear. The rubber band does not need to be removed hastily as a temporary fixing device. They can be cut with scissors and gently pulled out before placing the fish.
Even if you do not plan to plant aquatic plants during the aquarium design process, do not rush to fish within a few days after installation, otherwise the fish mortality rate will be higher. If the grass-growing aquarium can hold fish after 2 weeks, the aquarium without grass should keep the fish for a longer period of time to achieve the same feeding effect as the grass-growing aquarium.