Methods For Soaking Plants?

Plants need water to survive, and when transporting a crate of plants, the best place is usually the bottom-most deck of the ship slightly filled with water. To prevent shrivelation, ensure that water is filled up to the darkened green line on the crate. The best tip is to fill the boat with enough water that covers the box and then place the plants in there.

The key to success is having enough water in your ship to soak them properly. The plant crate has a blue-green color, and optogenetic tools could be used to achieve precise spatio-temporal control of plant stress responses. When you set down a freshly-collected crate of plants, their crate will appear blue and “water-logged” up to a certain point.

A new cybersecurity attack on the city of Arkansas’ water has triggered a new FBI and Homeland Security investigation. Houseplants, container plants, vegetable gardens, lawns, and ornamentals have specific watering requirements. The water level should be above the box, and the plants should absorb the water. To test this, place a plant in the hull with several buckets of water and place another plant on the deck above the first one.

Plants can be refreshed by placing them in a sufficient amount of water or throwing a bucket of water at them. When transporting a crate of plants, the best place is usually the bottom-most deck of the ship slightly filled with water. If your turtles look “unhealthy”, they may lose their dark green color and become more yellow. Watering them when the soil starts to dry out is essential for their health.


📹 How to Complete Cargo Runs (EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW) | Sea of Thieves

SEA OF THIEVES Sea of Thieves is a pirate-themed action-adventure cooperative multiplayer game played from a first-person …


How do you keep plants wet?

To ensure the health of your garden, it’s recommended to use drip irrigation and an automatic timer. Watering plants slowly allows moisture to soak into the soil and permeate down to the root level, preventing leaf diseases and preventing them from drying out. Drip lines, available at nurseries and home centers, provide effective irrigation. Automatic timers can be used for watering your garden, allowing you to set up automatic, daily, or regular cycles.

Additionally, mixing water-absorbing materials like coconut coir, peat moss, or compost into your soil can help retain moisture and improve the structure, aeration, and overall health of the soil, leading to better long-term success for your garden.

How do you give water to a plant?

Watering plants correctly is crucial for their growth and health. It involves understanding the plant’s watering needs and the various factors that influence it, such as the type of plant, size, soil texture, weather, sun exposure, time of day, and time of year. To become a watering pro, it is essential to follow these 7 best practices: water where the roots are, check the soil before watering, water in the morning, water slowly, make every drop count, don’t overwater, don’t let them go dry, and use mulch to conserve moisture. As horticulturist Liberty Hyde Bailey noted, the skill of the gardener in watering plants is a skill that cannot be explained in print.

How to water the plants in Sea of Thieves?
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How to water the plants in Sea of Thieves?

The Crate of Searing Plants is a type of Cargo Crate found in Sea of Thieves, the Ashen variant of the Crate of Exotic Plants. It can be damaged, causing its value to decrease. The Crate of Searing Plants is damaged by lack of contact with sufficient water, causing the plants to wilt and shrivel. It degrades approximately twice as fast as its regular counterpart, taking approximately 7 minutes to degrade by one stage.

Refreshing plants by submerging them in water or throwing them with a bucket can refresh them, but it won’t return damaged plants to a higher quality level. To prevent shrivelling, ensure that water is filled up to the darkened purple line on the crate.

How often do you need to water plants in Sot?

The frequency of watering plants is dependent upon the specific needs of the plant in question. Some plants require daily watering, while others necessitate watering less frequently, such as once a week or once a month. Additionally, some plants, particularly those that thrive in a dry climate, can be watered less frequently, with monthly watering being sufficient in many cases.

How do you submerge plants in water?

The phenomenon of bubbling in the soil is attributed to the process of water filling air pockets, which then forces the air in and out, as per the aforementioned information.

How do you water an underwater plant?
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How do you water an underwater plant?

To revive a plant, soak it in a saucer for 30 minutes to an hour to help the soil absorb water and expand. After soaking, remove the plant and leave it for up to 24 hours to see if it has revived. We all have issues with under or over-watering at some point. To save your leafy companion, follow these tips:

  1. Check your plants for water regularly, but only when they need it. Be aware of each plant’s watering needs and consider changes in season.

  2. Look for signs of underwatering, such as wilted or wrinkly leaves, drooping branches, browning leaves and leaf tips, leaf loss, and leaf curling. If your plant produces small or paper-thin leaves and grows slower than usual, it could be due to underwatering.

In summary, reviving a plant involves regular watering, recognizing signs of underwatering, and adjusting watering schedules to ensure optimal plant health.

How do you place water plants?

Oxygenating plants should be planted in moist soil in their own pots. An 8″ pot can accommodate 1 bag of plants. Remove cuttings from the mesh bag, tuck half the stem into the soil, and bury the root system. Leave the soil level 1″ below the top and fill the remaining space with gravel. Soak the soil with pond water to prevent muddying. Place pots directly on the bottom of the pond between lily tubs. Hornwort floats in the pond.

How often do I water my plants?

Water lawns deeply once or twice a week instead of short spurts every other day, according to gardener Lauri Kranz. Lawns are not the problem, as they help keep neighborhoods cooler and reduce energy costs. Instead, people should focus on “deficit watering” to keep water costs low and lawns healthy. Learn how to use your sprinkler timer and turn off irrigation in cool months between November and April.

How long should water sit before watering plants?
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How long should water sit before watering plants?

To ensure tap water safety, it is essential to let the water sit for 24 hours to allow chemicals like chlorine and fluoride to evaporate. A full watering can is recommended for quick watering in dry soil. Reverse osmosis is a technology that removes contaminants from water, but it can be expensive and not suitable for casual gardeners.

To balance pH levels, add vinegar or lemon juice to the plant’s water once a month, which are acidic and help balance pH levels. For higher pH levels, add limestone or wood ash, or counter undesirable pH levels with soil that is high or low in pH. Fertilizers containing sulfur can lower pH levels, while those containing lime or dolomite increase them.

Alternatives to tap water include rainwater, which is naturally soft and beneficial for plants due to millions of years of evidence. Bottled water is suitable for situations where tap water isn’t working or is contaminated, but it can be too expensive and environmentally destructive to be used as the primary watering source.

How do you keep plants from drying out in sea of thieves?

To prevent plants from drying out, use a single bucket of water or fill your ship to touch the top of the plant pot. If you overfill your boat while playing solo, fill the bucket in the air and fill it again with the remaining water. Avoid throwing the bucket overboard. The exact number of buckets required depends on the type of plant and the water level. It is recommended to use 10-12 buckets for optimal plant care.

How do you reduce moisture in plants?
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How do you reduce moisture in plants?

Pots with drainage holes are crucial for proper plant watering, as without them, airflow is disrupted, water sits in the pot for too long, and pools at the bottom, leading to root rot. If your planter lacks drainage, drill holes or use a nursery pot with drainage. It’s important not to place rocks at the bottom of your planter, as water will pool at the bottom, causing roots to grow around the rocks and sit in the water pool.


📹 Maintenance On A New Planted Aquarium – The First 2 Months – Step by Step Tutorial

This comprehensive guide delves deep into the crucial first two months of maintaining your planted aquarium. Join Tommy as he …


Methods For Soaking Plants
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  • “(Everything you need to know)” – part what is missing You get 350 pristine old world cargo average of 8 items on a map, 700 for devil’s roar cargo average of 6 items. 250 if slightly damaged and 500 for the same amount of damage in devil’s roar. So even if you’re perfect and get 2800g a run in the old world, you can get 3000g a run for slightly damaged in devil’s roar (4200g pristine). Don’t do what is done in this article if you have Rum Bottles, any damage to your ship(ramming that outpost), any grinding on a sand bar, or getting hit by cannon balls will damage your rum bottles. There is no reduction in damage from being in the crows nest. All items can take some damage before they change to the next worse thing. You can jump once with the rum and see some cracks at the heads of the bottles but the name doesn’t change. You can jump into deep water with rum bottles and they take no damage. Until the name of the item changes they are still considered “pristine”. I’ve had a crewmate miss the ladder with silks and land in the water but was able to get out of the water fast enough before it changed and we still got pristine credit. Rain is one of the quickest ways to ruin silks without realizing it, because often times you think you are out of range but there is a little drizzle of rain but it still counts as being in the storm so your silks start to get wet fast. Having them on top of your boat instead of in the captains area under cover is kinda silly and a risk. You have to buy cargo runs from merchants, once you put it down and vote on it, the map will tell you how many pieces of cargo you will get and from whom and where.

  • I know what you mean . I played this game for 6 months straight. It’s by far my favorite game in a very long time. But it’s time to let the old dog rest a little. Forza horizon 4 is sweet . Also just go watch pirates of the Caribbean (the first 3) and you’ll feel SO refreshed as you have the theme stuck in your head as you’re battling skeletons and sailing to glory

  • This update is alright, but I doubt I’ll use it once I get all the achievements. I feel like the only way people will be actively invested in merchant quests is when we can fish during voyages and sell those fish for money and merchant reputation. Hey maybe there could be some sort of mysterious or cursed fish that could count towards order of the souls reputation

  • I was heading to island to deliver some goods and this old mate was on the dock waving his hand about and I was like waving back I begin to pull up when the volcano erupts causing bottles to break and holes in my ship I forgot to anchor in all the rush of the holes in my ship I crash roll back and I decide to ditch the ship and sell the goods before they go bad I get onto the top deck and die from a falling rock I respawn in hot water where I attempt to carry some plant to old mate i die with his plant right in front of him and the whole time this guy just smiles and waves

  • Sorry to hear you’re falling off of this game right as it’s starting to pick up. Hopefully the big year anniversary update with the story added will freshen up the game for you. This is my personal game of the year. No two play sessions are the same for me. And I’ve met so many great people through this game. This isn’t the type of game to grind out. Play it once or twice a week with friends and it’s a blast.

  • I am not a fan of the cargo runs. I am a bit disappointed. I was hoping they would provide a decent amount of coin and xp. They are only beneficial for the doubloons but even then 100 and 200 pristine delivered is what it takes for the majority. If you damage one in the slightest it doesn’t count towards your commendation total. Additionally, the devs advertised a new level of pvp type play in order to steal cargo. For such little reward on such volatile cargo, I don’t see people putting in the effort to attack one another. From a non PL perspective it may take a bit longer and slightly more effort but traditional merchant voyages yield much higher coin and xp. I’ll stick to the normal grind.

  • I wish there were more articles like this out there. I’m always interested in the long term evolution of an aquascape, how it looks when it’s just planted, when it’s going through growing pains, what it looks like when matured, and how it looks when it’s maintained for a year or more. Obviously, challenging to accomplish from the content creation side, but very educational for us viewers 🙂

  • I love this article! Finally someone is showing the everyday issues we all face when setting up an aquarium. Personally, I had constant problems with driftwood. It took ages before it went to the bottom and I had a huuuge growth of the fungy slimely thing you also mentioned. Unfortunately, in my case neither otos neither amanos didn’t want to consume it, so I was left alone with a toothbrush… I really had to be patient but it’s getting nicer and nicer and I envy my husband who’s working from home and can observe it almost all day long.

  • Thank You Tommy fo Your efford to take us for this constant 9-week jurney! It was great pleasure to follow the work. The most important issue You placed at the end: The aquascaping it’s not only succes, but also bad issues. Despite this it’s allways “our perfect world to create”! That’s why we all love that!!!🤗😉

  • Super informative! I agree that most articles are all about the scaping and first day, like a honeymoon phase. But the following 1-3 months after set up are where crucial adjustments/maintenance have to happen to have a successful tank. Thanks for doing this! One of my fav articles you guys have done: practical and realistic.

  • Hey Hey Tommy👋 I’m really enjoying perusal The journey of this tank!! I love how you put the wood together (thank you Lori 😂🤗💚) I agree the subject of fertilizers has always been confusing.. but I’ve learned a lot with you guys and I thank you so much for all the experience you share!! So I’ve made it to setting up my second aquascape. I set one up for my daughter!! All of your tips have absolutely helped me create more successful aquariums!!🙏 The daisy rice fish are stunners and definitely deserve more attention! This article is really helping me in what to expect with the newly planted tank! We are just on week one so we’re looking forward to seeing it grow in! One thing we don’t have right now is a proper light and actually had to set up a DIY one. Definitely aquascaping on a budget 😁 we are looking for some Otto’s now!! Thank you all so much for all the tips with the tools!! Another great tutorial!! I hope everybody there at Green Aqua is having a very blessed weekend!!🙏💚🌿🐟🌿

  • At last a article from day 1!! Could you please answer two more things which I was missing from the article: 1. Do I have to decrease the light intensity in the first few weeks and how many hours should I let them on. 2. The CO2 should be running all the time on low or normal dose and should stop 2 hours before the lights go off. Thank you for the great article!

  • Great article, very knowledgeable and helpful! I did notice one discrepancy and that was that Tommy said that the slime on the wood was fungus, this is actually the tree sap that gets expelled from the wood as the water in the tank takes its place. No hate I just thought I would point that out. Fantastic article!

  • As a new enthusiast. I have 3 questions (Vote up if anyone in chat has these too) 1. Are fish needed to be added to a planted tank ? Or can this hobby be about plants and the scape ? 2. Why I ask the question above is, what happens if you need to have a 7 day holiday? How do you prepare? Or does the hobby turn into a full time job ? 3. If we need to go out for 7 days, how to stop anxiety even if we have automated ferts, filtration, lighting, timers, co2 and feeding ? Would love a article of how hobbyists can comfortably take time off as well? What say ? Thanks

  • Dear pro expert aquascaper Tommy, Kindly I have questions, you are follow the lean dose as you told (Ada micro & potassuim) so: 1- what is exactly your daily routine dose of micro & potassuim in your tanks in general specially med-hi tech as decedent Filipe Oliveira declared his fertilization routine 2- if you add daily Ada micro, is it reasonable? because the name is micro which plants need it very little? 3- if your routine dose only micro & potassuim, this is not making deficiencies for some plants (because absent of macro dose)? even if you have strong substrate system Thanks in advance

  • Thank you! You got me started this new hobby after perusal all your articles. I guess this article came at the right time, I am 2 weeks into the new water cycle and I noticed my Monte Carlo and Staurogyne repens started melting away and thread algae forming around it. Any idea why is it so? And what should I do?

  • Hi the Team (Armel from France) Nice article. Very instructive. 2 Questions : 1 – To put fish and algae eaters so fast (2 and 3 weeks) – how have you accelerated the nitrogen cycle ? 2 – When you do a 50% water change every day for the first week, when you add fertilizers after adding water, the new proportions are calculated on 100% of the liter? or 50% of the liter ? Bye !

  • I have got one question about the fertilization. U use it from day one. Do u use the 100% recommended amount wich is written on the back of the bottle or do u go up from 25,50,75,100% per week from the start? And final question 😂 At what week do you start using the Ada iron fertilizer. 😌 Love your Chanel

  • Great article! But I have a question, If I am using Seachem Stability during the cycling of the tank, should I do the daily water changes at the first week, then water changes every other day and continuing this way constantly? Or should I let the bacterias to grow and stable on the filter without water changes? Because there’s a lot of ammonia being released by the aquasoil and I don’t know if I am doing it well. Thank you guys!

  • Late to the party. I have a gift 🎉 I did this and am too successful 4 months later. No spikes, lush green plants all from being a little patient. The addition of some great Dwarf Gouramis and a pair of Peppered Cory’s and the fun began. These fish provide the fertilizer. The plants provide O2 and cover.

  • How do you suggest I do my ramp up for the lights considering that I am not adding fertilizers as of the moment? I am running a lowtech non CO2 tank. Currently my tank has been running for one week and my lighting is at 35% intensity for 8 hours a day (4 hours in the morning and 4 hours in the evening). I do this to prevent algae during the first few weeks also while the emersed plants are still transitioning and melting to become a submerged form. I would appreciate your input about this, thanks. I Love Your articles!

  • Great article! I have a couple of questions if you would be so kind. 1. Do you have your lights and co2 running and full capacity during the first view weeks or do you gradually bring them up? 2. When you are changing 50% water every day or every other day, do you only do a 50% dose of the fertilizers to bring the levels back to 100%? Or is there a need to do a complete 100% dose each time you’re doing a 50% water change? I’m worried about over-fertilizing during the first weeks and ending up with an algae disaster… Maybe I missed it but I also noticed you didn’t have any diatoms when the filter would typically be cycling. Is this because you were using already-cycled media from another tank or is there another secret? 😉 Any help would be greatly appreciated! I hope to start my first aquascape with co2 soon 🙂

  • Thanks for the article! Very impressive. One question I have… How much does the water evaporate with the open tank? Do you top off the tank daily, or do you just do water changes to fill the water back to the top? I guess in the first few weeks since the water changes are done so often it’s not an issue, but then afterwards when you don’t change water as often I’m curious what you do

  • A good layout as always. Thanks guys. Indeed, I made a mistake once with my nano 23L. I turned off the filter to feed my fish and I just forgot to turn it on . Next days I had to deal with a big nitirite issue. Some shrimps died. So, guys how can you add algae eaters from week two ?. Normally, I need to wait until week 4 in order to get low nitrite levels. Otherwise shrimps can’t stand that. Cheers!

  • Hi Tommy! Great article! Just a question : you suggest to use GH+/KH+ in tank without natural limestone presence to insure a minimum KH level to maintain pH stable, but what about the Ada Amazonia 2 buffering effect? Doesn’t adding KH to a technical substrate contribute to exhaust its buffering ability much quicker? 🤔 Thanks, have a nice day 😉

  • Tommy mentioned that at times Amano shrimp can be hard to get hold of, which reminded me of a question I had. Has Green Aqua ever experienced aggressive amano shrimp? Last year I bought 10 amanos which were in a tank on their own for months. Within 15mins of adding some Chili rasbora, one of the shrimp had hold of one and the others were being chased. Over night two fish died. The amanos were removed. Perhaps over time, since their popularity has boomed, we are seeing hybrid forms of Amanos?

  • Hi Tommy, I’m commenting on a relatively old article, hope you would see and reply. Question is, ADA Amazonia Ver 2 leaches a lot of Ammonia into the water. If water changes are not done properly would it cause to burn/melt some plants? Have you ever experienced Ammonia burn in plants if you don’t do water change? Probably that’s the reason you suggest doing the 50% water changes so to not damage plants as because too much ammonia can damage them probably?

  • Loved the layout!!!! Never trust wood 😁… I’ve seen 4kg wood piece glued to rocks and it started floating when filling with water. Seen it happen with 7kg wood piece too 😂. To answer what happened to my first weeks of new layout… Well, been a lucky bastard when it comes to that and really never seen any algae outbreak. Only floating wood 😅! Keep it up with GreenAqua great articles!

  • Quick question, is it typically normal to get some cloudy water early from bacteria taking advantage of extra nutrients while waiting on the beneficial bacteria to convert the nitrites/ammonia to nitrates and detoxify chemical levels. I see how daily water changes early can help. Good water agitation helps I think w my filter. But do you get that often when waiting on the filter media bacteria to grow? Would you suggest frequent water changes until the bacteria are established, or less water changes to let them outcompete naturally? And is it possible to do the frequent water changes with some fish and shrimp already in the tank? Just worried about pH spikes. Thank you so much for all the content! Love from South Carolina

  • Could anyone answer this question, can I cycle a tank using Fritz while fertilizing and doing a 50 percent water change daily? How should I go about this, I am worried I will lose my good bacteria from the fritz 7 after the substantial water changes on the first week. Any advice would be appreciated!

  • Regarding KH in a tank with aquasoil, there are folks out there that say not to use kh buffers in a tank with buffering substrate because that will react with the kh and remove it. In other words having the kh buffer and the aquasoil fighting with each other. Is that your experience? Do you normally use gh+ on your nature aquariums or are you using gh/kh+ On them now?

  • At 13:40 when you are brushing the algae off the wood and it’s dust is plooming up, what is your experience with this causing it to spread to like your rocks, glass, plants etc. ? I know you can stop your filter and do a WC after but even so, is it likely this can cause it to spread to other areas or do you often find that it does not?

  • Hello, I need your help. I will do a 30l tank with red cherry, 450l/h external filter, 1000lm lamp, 3l of amazonia light, 7kgs of okho stones, and the plants of your second no co2 betta article, but I don’t know if I can fertilizing because I haven’t co2, but I don’t want to have a lowtech tank. So Can I fertilizing, and if the answer is yes, how? Thanks for your articles

  • I always get problems after two months ^^. A small question, a common problem I have is: especially with Rotala, that I cut it back and then no longer drives it out but dies. If I don’t cut it, it will grow normally; if I cut it, it will die, regardless of the height. Do you know what I’m doing wrong? regards

  • I have this 1 month and 3 weeks tank and I’m having quite a problem about this “algae” that turns plant into black. I’m not sure if my plants are dying. I just want my plants to grow healthy and I don’t know what to do. I water change 50% once a week and maintenance it. Doesn’t have a gravel cleaner though

  • My tank had too much light because it was placed in the living room where it receives a lot of indirect sunlight. Over the course of 3 months time it had been hit with brown algae (diatoms), then blue green algae (cyanobacteria) and now it’s looking great after I used a product called Ultra Life Blue Green Slime Remover. The BGA started in the front of the tank close to the carpet plants and glass. I guess the reason was the water I was using had cyanobacteria as it comes from an old water tank above the toilet. I also used a credit card to scrape on it causing it to spread throughout the tank. Fingers crossed hopefully the BGA don’t come back again.

  • Very nice article! I recently killed my Tank because it was a horror to maintain. (Never!!! combine lots of Moss in a Bonsai with carpeting plants ;-P you will hate it, even when its beautiful. ) So this topic will come to me soon again… setting up my New Tank. A article about more details on using RO water and reminalizing the water would be great. Maybe also the influence of Soil in the beginning of a start with RO water. Keep up the great work! Looping forward to Visit GreenAqua one day when this stupid Virus leaves us alone. Greetings from Ratisbona(germany)

  • Hi Green aqua i have just rescaped a nano open top tank its been running a few weeks but I have started to get green slime its on my wood plants and the glass I am using a HOB filter with a built in uv my substrate is fluval stratum its got co2 running I use fertiliser once a week but my aquarium looks a right mess so I need some advice cheers

  • I get that the point of this website is the plants, not the livestock but doing bi daily 50% water changes is SUPER stressful on shrimp. They should be added when you go down a small water changes once a week around 10-25% water changes. I breed shrimp, I would know. I’ve made the mistake of trying to keep my shrimps tanks as pristine as possible and lost 3 full tanks as well as half my colony in 2 other tanks, only 1 tank showed zero adverse effects and that was my painted red cherry shrimp.

  • I am confused with ADA Amazonia soil. Your water parameters article said don’t use KH since this soil buffers it but you are adding your new GH/KH + with fresh ADA soil. I have only been using GH+ since the soil buffers it but I constantly lose all my fish. Should I be adding KH in? I added a little KH in a few days ago and tested it the next day and the KH was depleted to 0. This soil has me so confused. Great for plants but cant keep any fish alive 🙁

  • How does the oto compare with the siamese flying fox for algae? Fun fact from wiki: the golden otocinclus (Macrotocinclus affinis, formerly Otocinclus affinis) is one of the smallest known suckermouth catfish, often called a ‘dwarf oto’. In reality, they belong to the species O. vittatus, O. vestitus and O. macrospilus. The real O. affinis is not present in the aquarium hobby…