


cprcheetah wrote:My husband took some sandstone and drilled holes in it and then glued the plants in the holes, so far so good....make sure the glue is safe. It works. My only concern is Zeke has nibbled off a couple bites here and there of the plastic plants...I get paid on Wednesday so we are hopefully going to switch those to real live plants.
Here's an example:
zuse wrote:Yeah. I was at the pet store and the guy saw me looking at plants. When I told him I had a turtle he told me he used to keep one and that if I got plants it would just eat them (and probably kill them). He said he used to give his cuttings from aquatic plants. And off the record recommended I try to locate some of those that are *ahem* illegal to sell because they are considered noxious weeds. Which if what I learned in Plant Biology is similar to this, it is plants that are considered a hazard to agriculture crops? The guy who led our lab told us he was always going to Lowe's and calling in the people to come and destroy shipments of plants that pretty much trash forests and other ecosystems... however a bunch aren't illegal just because they don't trash cash crops. Anyways, the point being that the plants grow like crazy and the turtle would have plenty to munch on with the tank still looking pretty.
missibsu wrote: I've seen pics of the suction cup plants, but I've never found them in stores.
zuse wrote:This is the list he meant. It's posted in the store:
http://www.dnr.sc.gov/water/envaff/aqua ... llegal.pdf
He made it sound like it was just illegal to sell it. It's also illegal to possess them. Never mind, then. Especially since what I'm studying is kind of something practially in the Clemson Department of Agriculture...
I don't think all the noxious weeds are illegal if they're already prevalent?
ZooKeeper wrote:I live in South Carolina and can buy anacharis at Petsmart.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 24 guests