
driftwood
Moderator: Mustafa
- prawnman88
- <b>BANNED</b>
- Posts: 67
- Joined: Sun Nov 27, 2005 5:35 pm
- Location: tempe arizona
driftwood
adding drift wood does this cloud the water and should i do some water changes to helpmake it not so cloudy ? water passed all tests with flyining colors 

Driftwood adds tannins to the water, which has a tendancy to 'soften' the water. This is either bad, good, neutral, or downright desirable, depending on who lives in the tank.
I boiled mine for around 8 hours, to lessen the amount of tannins released. Despite 8 hours boiling time each, I still had some leeching after about 2 months of service.
It has about the same effects as 'black water extract', I think. If you're concerned about its effects on your tank's occupants, search for that, or simply, 'tannins'. You ought to find a more situation suitable response that way, baring further details in this particular thread.
I boiled mine for around 8 hours, to lessen the amount of tannins released. Despite 8 hours boiling time each, I still had some leeching after about 2 months of service.
It has about the same effects as 'black water extract', I think. If you're concerned about its effects on your tank's occupants, search for that, or simply, 'tannins'. You ought to find a more situation suitable response that way, baring further details in this particular thread.
- prawnman88
- <b>BANNED</b>
- Posts: 67
- Joined: Sun Nov 27, 2005 5:35 pm
- Location: tempe arizona
I have a big piece of Malaysian driftwood that I did not boil or bleach. It slowly releases a minute amount of coloration to the water. When I do water changes, the fish and especially theshrimp perk up, but I attribute this to lowering the nitrates and other by-products...not getting rid of the tannins or other leachates from the wood. If your water is becoming "cloudy", it is probably from bacteria or algae in the water...not leachates from the wood.
-
- Shrimp
- Posts: 218
- Joined: Wed Feb 16, 2005 1:22 am
- Location: Hawaii - USA
My experience is with driftwood and Cherries and Amanos. And it seems not to be dangerous because the Cherries have regualrly bred and the Amanos have produced eggs and larvae. Even when the tannins have occasionally deeply tinted the water. This is an extreme example too because the driftwood in that tank probably takes up nearly 1/4th of the tank's volume.
The tea-like tannin discoloration is annoying to me though. I would boil (or soak them in HOT water) for at least half an hour (also changing the water when it gets dark), then set up a spare tank on the side to soak the wood for a week or two or more, with a strong heater hooked up and turned all the way up... so you basically have it in bath temperature water (40+ degrees C)... while changing out that water every couple days.
Chances are it'll still continue to leach a little (some pieces do this less than others though), but nothing like if you just plopped it into your tank. In your 50 gallon tank, it'll probably take a long while without water change for you to notice the leaching. Activated carbon in your filter is also supposed to help control the tannin tint... but I haven't used it.
Never the less, I think the animals, especially shrimp enjoy driftwood... and it looks great.
The tea-like tannin discoloration is annoying to me though. I would boil (or soak them in HOT water) for at least half an hour (also changing the water when it gets dark), then set up a spare tank on the side to soak the wood for a week or two or more, with a strong heater hooked up and turned all the way up... so you basically have it in bath temperature water (40+ degrees C)... while changing out that water every couple days.
Chances are it'll still continue to leach a little (some pieces do this less than others though), but nothing like if you just plopped it into your tank. In your 50 gallon tank, it'll probably take a long while without water change for you to notice the leaching. Activated carbon in your filter is also supposed to help control the tannin tint... but I haven't used it.
Never the less, I think the animals, especially shrimp enjoy driftwood... and it looks great.
- prawnman88
- <b>BANNED</b>
- Posts: 67
- Joined: Sun Nov 27, 2005 5:35 pm
- Location: tempe arizona