George Farmer said:
plantbrain said:
This is an incredible display.
It may not suit some tastes. Maybe too formal for many. However, it's probably the finest display of healthy aquarium plant growth anyone is likely to see on here.
I actually like the relatively rigid layout - sure it's at odds with the Nature Aquarium concept but it's nice to see a refreshing and rather unique style like this. The journal title is certainly accurate in its description...
It's like it's forcing you to notice each species; their colours and textures provide maximum impact and visual feast to suppress anyone's appetite. Almost like a freshwater equivalent to a reef.
I wish I had the time to maintain something like this!
😀
Kudos to you, Mr Barr.
I'm having some aquascaping-enthusiast friends over this weekend and I'm hoping to run a video podcast. Would you mind if this aquascape was one of the topics we discuss?
Surprisingly, it really does not take that long to care for. And I mess with it a lot as you can tell. But I do not make large changes rapidly, slow and steady pace.........wins the race. I wait 2-3 weeks rather than trying to redo everything. Too much disturbance I think gets many aquarist into trouble. I also do use high light now, but I only did so with baby steps to make sure everything was good and then.......take the next step.
It might take me 10-20 min of time to trim the rows most weeks. The back ground, maybe 20 min.
I spend more time culling the lower grade Fire shrimp than I do trimming.
One might call the Dutch style a controlled collectoritus approach, but some Dutch tanks do strive for natural appearances also and they get more points for that.
I finally got my Ammannia gracilus and I think I'll move the Ludwigia peruinesis and replace with the Ammannia.
It's got a nicer coloration that is different from the Rotala and Ludwigia.
The other nice thing is the eclectic array of species in this display.
I've not seen anyone scape with Erio setacuem except one tank locally, and never with the Type 3, very few with Tonia(maybe 3-5 tanks), none with Ludwigia red(but that's going to change) and Erio cinereum use in scaping is extremely limited, then add the R macrandra, L pantanal, UG etc.........S belem/manuas/urupese I'd considered by plant of folks scape with those......so Erio type 3 was a nice replacement for giant Ambulia which is more common and very ordered plant as well.
The tank is also nice as a rotating species collection, allowing me to sample and compare/contrast many species.
Nature style is a very poor method for doing that. Still, in the back ground of many Nature style, you can mix and match and try various stem species out also, but those backgrounds are much more Dutch, than they are nature style.
So there's cross over in both styles.