A follow up from the previous post to show another spathe
Crypts are interesting and beautiful aquatic plants, but with fewer growers and tight import restrictions we're now losing varieties from cultivation in Australia. I'm propagating crypts to pass on to other growers to keep them in the aquarium hobby and building a resource to help with identification. I'm always looking to buy or swap for new varieties to grow.
Friday, 3 November 2017
Thursday, 2 November 2017
The Cryptarium
Made from a 6x2x2 aquarium that could no longer be used for water because the silicon holding the braces gave way. I removed the bracing and rolled the tank onto its side so the opening is now on the front.
A new piece of polished glass is siliconed across the bottom of the opening to hold the water. The opening is closed off by a piece of twin-wall polycarbonate with a couple of cable grommets installed as vents and handles. On a hot day the afternoon sun through the window was pushing the air temp to 40+C before the vents were installed. Some corrugated translucent polycarbontate sits between the tank and the window to diffuse the direct sun.
To keep it neat and tidy I mounted the heater in a DIY PVC external enclosure in the cabinet. The base of the tank is drilled at each end and bulkheads are installed that allow a loop of 16/22mm hose lagged with closed cell foam to connect the tank to the heater chamber. It works by thermosiphon without a pump. Hot water rises from the heater into the tank at one end and cooler water sinks out of the bulkead at the other end of the tank and circulates back down to the heater. The heater is set to 20C.
This new growing space replaces a couple of the polystyrene boxes I was using.
A new piece of polished glass is siliconed across the bottom of the opening to hold the water. The opening is closed off by a piece of twin-wall polycarbonate with a couple of cable grommets installed as vents and handles. On a hot day the afternoon sun through the window was pushing the air temp to 40+C before the vents were installed. Some corrugated translucent polycarbontate sits between the tank and the window to diffuse the direct sun.
To keep it neat and tidy I mounted the heater in a DIY PVC external enclosure in the cabinet. The base of the tank is drilled at each end and bulkheads are installed that allow a loop of 16/22mm hose lagged with closed cell foam to connect the tank to the heater chamber. It works by thermosiphon without a pump. Hot water rises from the heater into the tank at one end and cooler water sinks out of the bulkead at the other end of the tank and circulates back down to the heater. The heater is set to 20C.
This new growing space replaces a couple of the polystyrene boxes I was using.
Wednesday, 1 November 2017
The "Baptism Tub" Cryptarium
A church was selling this "Baptism Tub" on ebay- its a big industrial plastic tub that I've put on a base of milk crates with a timber frame around it to stop it bowing out from the pressure of the water inside. I'm growing crypts on a row of inverted milk crates inside the tub. This allows the tub to hold a large volume of water to help stabilise the temperature. We have vary variable weather here and my glasshouse temperature fluctuates wildly and can get screaming hot in summer. A sheet of greenhouse plastic over the top keeps the warmth and humidity in while its cool... but in summer I'll switch to shadecloth so it breathes a bit better and I have some misters on a timer to cool the air down. In winter I'll have to put a heater in the tub as its common for the water to get below 7C.
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