***Being a natural product, sizes can vary from what is shown.***
1. Remove the potted plant from plastic basket, and split the rock wool in half.
2. Carefully remove the plant roots from the rock wool. The java fern can be planted as one single plant or gently separated into smaller plant clumps by snapping apart the rhizome.
3. Insert each plant clump between a crack in a rock or more firmly attach them to decor using super glue gel. Be careful not to bury the rhizome or the plant may suffer.
— Use low lighting between 10-20 PAR. Too much light may cause burning or excess algae growth, so if you are using a brighter light, consider placing the java fern further away from the light or under the shade of taller or floating plants.
— Why is my java fern turning brown? It may be a nutrient deficiency, so measure the nitrate level using a multi-test strip. Dose with Easy Green all-in-one fertilizer until the water has 20-50 ppm nitrate. If the java fern continues to grow poorly, consider dosing Easy Potassium fertilizer in addition to Easy Green for extra potassium.
— How to trim Java fern: If the java fern has dying or melting leaves, trim them off at the base of the leaf without damaging the rhizome.
— Use a sharp pair of scissors to cut the rhizome and split into two plants. Plant the two sections as normal.
— Another method is to trim off a leaf from the base and leave it in the tank. The dark dots on the leaf will grow into individual, little plantlets that eventually can be planted or moved to another tank.
Java fern 'Windelov' or Java fern lace is as easy to grow as normal Java fern - it thrives even under low light and is not very demanding. What makes it unique are its lacy leaves, which branch off at the tips. Robust "Windelov" Java fern plants can often survive in goldfish and African cichlid tanks because of their tougher leaves.