It is totally buried…should I take it out and let it sit on the surface?Did you partially bury the bulb (or totally bury it)?
Mine grow like Triffids, they were literally thrown into the aquariums, the fish batted them about a while before they sprouted and literally took off in a couple of weeks. I never partially bury mine, they sit on the surface of the sand.
Hello Nav. This plant requires very strong light. And, if you have a tank that's taller than it is wide, then standard tank lighting isn't going to be strong enough to reach the plant. SolarMax has lighting that's strong enough for most planted tanks. The brand isn't cheap, but it provides strong light and the bulbs last several months. Remember, when you provide strong light, you're asking the plant to grow faster. You'll need fertilizer that's equal to the level of light.I got the bulb and planted it in November and it has been about 4 months and this has barely even grown….does anyone know why?
I use flourish and flourish excel and run the lights for 8-10 hours in my 37g tank.
Ya, mine took 2-3 months to really get going.I concur on the subject of light. However, it takes this plant a while to get going, so be patient. It will produce floating lease and/or lower leaves, depending upon the light and nutrients and how you "prune" it. If you want floating leaves--and these are very lovely in an aquarium with the purple-red colour--leave any leaf stalks that appear growing up to the surface. Lower leaves will probably be fewer if there are more floaters, that is up to you. A Flourish Tab works wonders with this plant. But go easy on iron, I nearly killed my two plants by dosing Flourish Iron as well as Flourish Comprehensive (which also contains iron) and the tab (more iron). Iron also causes plants to stop assimilating some other nutrients.
This is also true. Part of the reason that my lotus took so long to get going was that my rope fish liked to 'play' with it. He would knock it around the tank like a soccer ball.Sometimes plants take time to develope their root systems first. They're growing, we just can't see it. But then after the roots are developed, then you see the growth in the stems and leaves.