We are now accepting orders for plants!
Plants that are fertilized and correctly planted add so much beauty to any water feature. Why spend a fortune on your plants but skimp on plant food! For tips on potting aquatic plants visit http://www.ciwga.org See our water gardening books for ideas on proper plant placement. Have an idea in mind but not sure how to make it work? Email me. with as many details as possible, I'll be happy to help you design the pond of your dreams. Plant supplies are available all year but our plants are available from late April to late August depending on the weather. Plants ship by Fed EX on Monday and Tuesdays to prevent plants being left in a warehouse over a weekend. You will be notified by email when your plants are shipped. We reserve the right to substitute a like plants.
 
Liquid Plant Foods
Plant Care Tools
Pots/ Planting Media
Insect control
Fertilizers
Hardy water lilies
Lousiana Iris
Night Blooming Lilies
Tropical Lilies
Lotus
Floating Plants
Submerged oxygenating plants
Hardy shallow water and bog plants

 
Here are some basic guidelines for the number of plants to use in common sizes of ponds. In a 4'x6' pond use 1 lily, 5-8 bog plants, 3 floaters, 24 submerged plants. A 6'x11' to 11'x11' pond use 2 lilies, 9-13 bog plants, 6 floaters, 44 submerged plants. For 11'x11' to 14'x16' ponds use 3 lilies, 10-15 bogs, 8 floaters, 90 submerged plants. A 16'x10' to 16'x21' pond uses 5 lilies, 13-18 bog plants, 12 floaters, 160 submerged plants. 21'x21' to 26'x 26' 7 lilies, 20-28 bog plants, 15 floaters, 200 submerged plants

 
Water Garden Plants - Koi Clubs USA

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Water gardens are often the most beautiful gardens around any home.
The blending of water and earth creates a corresponding balance that relaxes the body and mind as it inspires the soul. Yet water gardens can be challenging, too.

At first glance they may seem to be complicated places filled with unfamiliar plants with unusual needs. Happily, aquatic plants can be simpler to care for than they first appear.

Whether you want delicate floating plants, exotic water lilies, or carnivorous bog dwellers, you’ll find suitable choices for your taste and climate conditions.

The beautiful yet undemanding aquatic plants featured in our water garden plants section are sure to brighten your spirits as well as your garden for years to come.

Aquatic plants — also called hydrophytic plants or hydrophytes — are plants that have adapted to living in or on aquatic environments.

DirectGardening.com - Offers quality plants at great prices, come see what we mean!

Because living on or under the water surface requires numerous special adaptations, aquatic plants can only grow in water or permanently saturated soil.

Aquatic vascular plants can be ferns or angiosperms (from both monocot and dicot families). Seaweeds are not vascular plants but multicellular marine algae, and therefore not typically included in the category, "aquatic plants." As opposed to plants types such as mesophytes and xerophytes, hydrophytes do not have a problem in retaining water due to the abundance of water in its environment. This means the plant has less need to regulate transpiration (indeed, the regulation of transpiration would require more energy than the possible benefits incurred.)

Aquatic plants have many functions in the water garden. The obvious is that they provide beauty. The foliage and flowers offer the finishing touches to complete a dazzling aquatic display.

Pondkeepers with an understanding of filtration know the nitrification cycle and how plants play their role. Fish naturally secrete ammonia into the pond water. Biological filtration works to convert the ammonia into nitrites then the nitrites into nitrates. The nitrates are then used by the plants. If there are not enough plants using up the nitrates in your pond, you end up with an algae bloom (in extreme cases of nitrate buildup the fish may suffer as well). Plants that cover the pond surface also reduce algae by limiting the amount of sunlight reaching the water. For the best balance in a water garden around 2/3 of the pond surface should be covered with plant foliage.

Another, often overlooked, use of plants in the pond is protecting your fish from hungry predators. Whether it is tall plants at the water's edge that help prevent a raccoon from reaching the pond or the water lily pads covering the surface that give the fish a place to hide from a heron, a few plants may be all that is needed to avoid making a meal out of your pet fish.

Koi and Pond Plants
Koi can be very hard on your plants because of their persistent rooting habits. They will root around looking for insects and larvae to feed on. Any valuable plants should be planted in tubs, which are then placed in the pond.

Also make sure that if you are using bricks as a platform to set your plants on, to use some concrete pond paint on them to prevent them from leeching lye into the pond. This will be toxic to the fish and cause you to have extremely high pH levels.

 
Algae Control  
Why you should add waterlilies to your pond.  
Seasonal care of your pond  
Center For Aquatic and Invasive Plants  
USDA Planting Zone  

Watergardeners International Orgainzation  

 
 

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How to Build Ponds and Waterfalls DVD
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Master Book of the Water Garden
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Hide your koi from predators

Contact Gail Thomas at 641-750-3062 9 am - 7 pm Monday though Saturday richdeer3@yahoo.com Privacy Policy Return to sitemap