Picked up this nice piece of wood for 5 bucks and I was wondering whether I am sinking it properly? If so how long should wait before taking the rocks off. The wood is approximately 2' by 6".
My piece is light and mostly thin. Hopefully it sinks soon.That's what I have done, weigh it down with stones.
Be careful, because it is still buoyant, could unbalance the stones and then float up.
When I have submerged wood, it has taken between weeks and nearly one year, depending on the piece. It seems to me that really hard and dense wood, takes the longest. Maybe because it is the least porous.
I will take the big rock off. What would you recommend to sink it?That looks like a precarious arrangement of stones holding that wood down. As the wood slowly waterlogs, its buoyancy and balance will change and might topple that big guy on the left, which might then crack a tank wall or floor.
There's no way to make rocks stacked on top of wood look natural, so don't bother trying. Just make sure they are very stable and solid. Right now that big rock on the left looks like it could flip over just due to nothing more than harsh language.![]()
Something easy i can do, thanks! Will have to get a few more rocks though.Howdy,
that's a very nice piece of driftwood! I tend to not balance rocks on top of wood because, as mentioned, it could float up. The rocks could fall against the glass. As the wood shoots up, it can break the canopy. I tend to tie wood down with fishing line, tie the fishing line to rocks underneath, loop it around the driftwood, and tie it back onto the rock. Do that with a few rocks and it'll be unlikely to come loose and shoot up, and no rocks can fall and break the glass.
Happy fishkeeping,
HarleyK