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April 23rd, 2008
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Fish Addict
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Can I use ordinary wood as driftwood?
Hello
I was wondering if I can use ordinary wood(the ones on land) as driftwood for my aquarium - leaching it first before putting it in the tank. Is it ok, or is it harmful?
Thanks in advance!
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April 23rd, 2008
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Moderator
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Good question... Lyndato
I would like to know the answer to this one as well. I have also been wondering about using old dried wood from land.
Hope we find the answer.. it sure would be a lot cheaper than buying driftwood from the store. 
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April 23rd, 2008
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Fish Keeper
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I have a lake near my house and have found all of my driftwood there. I've just made to to clean it really really well (and for a longer amount of time than i would for something from the lfs).
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April 23rd, 2008
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Fish Helper
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I did think of using normal wood before, and left a piece, after washing it, in a tank of water (no fish!). Over the time it was in there, it coloured the water and started to rot. I'm sure it would be fine if it was covered in aquarium silicon or something...
By the time you've done that though, it probably wouldn't cost much less than bogwood.
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April 23rd, 2008
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Fish Keeper
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yeah, you probably could but I wouldn't prefer it.
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April 25th, 2008
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Fish Bum
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I've heard stories about driftwood that you find, or even wood, discolouring the water, and then the wood rots! I don't know if you could use wood, I have never tried it before! Hope you get the answer! (And hope I helped a teeny bit)
Ali!
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April 25th, 2008
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Fish Addict
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yeah, i'm not sure that i'd trust the wood i found with my fish. Who knows what it has picked up and no matter how well i cleaned it, i'd be a bit wary.
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April 25th, 2008
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Fish Helper
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The aquarium books I have - and some of the threads here - talk about boiling the driftwood. I did not do that with the driftwood I ordered for my tank and it is still releasing tannins (sp?) so the water is brownish - it gets clearer when I do the weekly partial water change. I soaked it for three days before putting it in the tank.
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April 25th, 2008
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Fish Bum
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i soaked my wood for three days, changing the water when it got brown, and it hasnt discoloured my tank water at all.
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April 25th, 2008
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Moderator
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I have used wood I have found many times but you have to remember to boil, boil, boil. The boiling kills any nasties that might be hiding in the crevices. It can also be baked in the oven at 200 degrees for about 2 hrs.
Trees like pine, cedar, cypress etc cannot be used because the oils won't boil or bake out and they are harmful to your fish.
Carol
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April 25th, 2008
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Fish Addict
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so I could use a hardwood if boiled and baked it?? cool
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April 26th, 2008
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Fish Helper
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If you boil the wood it will sink faster. If you feel you can't wait for the wood to sink on its own and you can't seem to hold it down zip tie a flat rock on it to hold it down.
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April 26th, 2008
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Fish Keeper
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I have wood I found outside on land in my tank, but it took a while to get in the tank.
first I took off all the bark. I dont know if that was nessisary, but driftwood dosent have bark so I took mine off.
Then I boiled it. I put in in room temp water, brought that up to a boil, let it boil all day, then turned off the burner and let it sit till it was room temp again.
Now I scrubbed it with a toothbrush. I made sure I got everything off of it.
Next I soaked it, for months. I think it was about 2 months soaked before I got all the tannis out, then I let it sit for another month, to make sure it didnt rot.
Then it went in the tank, and I think it lookes pretty good. I dont have a fish that needs to eat wood, like a bn pleco, so I dont know if it will work in that aspect.
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April 26th, 2008
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Moderator
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If it won't sink you can also attach a rock using stainless steel screws.
My husband uses the drill to put holes through flat rocks then drills a SS screw through the hole in the rock into the wood. Works great, Ss screws are best as they don't rust.
Carol
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April 26th, 2008
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Fish Addict
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odd (question because i have never used drift wood before) how would i boil driftwood and what do i do if the driftwood is very large or odd shaped
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April 26th, 2008
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Fish Keeper
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hehehe, I've run into this, it's a pain. What I did was look around flea markets and thrift stores for old huge canning boilers or lobster cookers. Once I found one huge enough I put it up to use just for driftwood. In some cases I've still had to boil one half then flip it and boil the other because the whole thing wouldn't fit.
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April 26th, 2008
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Fish Helper
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I found wood on an empty block of land.
The wood is really long so I boil water in my kettle and pour over the drift wood.
I repeated this many times in a day over several days.
Then, I soaked it in the aquarium without fish for 2 weeks.
All the color came off.
No problems with it thus far.
I read somewhere that pleco enjoy chewing on the bark.
Don't know if its true. I haven't got a pleco yet.
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April 27th, 2008
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Fish Keeper
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Quote:
Originally Posted by zeebo
I found wood on an empty block of land.
The wood is really long so I boil water in my kettle and pour over the drift wood.
I repeated this many times in a day over several days.
Then, I soaked it in the aquarium without fish for 2 weeks.
All the color came off.
No problems with it thus far.
I read somewhere that pleco enjoy chewing on the bark.
Don't know if its true. I haven't got a pleco yet.
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well, it might work. If the wood was really dried out first, and now has been in the tank for 2 weeks and you didn't get any nasty basteria blooms then you might be OK I think. Still, to be on the safe side, you might want to introduce only 1 or 2 fish at first to the tank. Maybe buy a couple feeder guppies or something expendabele first until you're sure it's safe for your good fish.
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