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How to Plant Water Hyacinth

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Water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes) is a beautiful aquatic plant that is popular for ponds and water gardens. However, it can also become invasive and take over waterways if not properly managed. Here is a guide on how to successfully plant water hyacinth while keeping it under control.

Choosing the Right Location

When planting water hyacinth, it’s important to choose a location that gets full sun and has still or slow-moving water. Stagnant water allows the plants to spread more rapidly. However, be cautious about planting water hyacinth in public ponds or waterways, as it is banned in some states due to its invasive potential. Container ponds or backyard ponds are better options for managing the spread.

Obtaining the Plants

Water hyacinth can be purchased at many aquarium and water gardening stores. Choose plants with healthy foliage and no signs of disease. It’s best to start with just a few starter plants, rather than dumping bunches of water hyacinth into a pond all at once. This gives you a chance to assess their growth rate and how quickly they spread in your specific environment.

Introducing the Plants to the Pond

To add water hyacinths to a pond, just put the starter plants where you want them and let them float away. Their bulbous stems will keep the plants afloat. If you need to, you can tie the plants down with nylon string by connecting it to a stone or brick at the bottom of the pond. But floating freely is the preferred method. The plants will quickly acclimate and begin multiplying.

Caring for Water Hyacinth

Once established, water hyacinth requires very little care. They flourish in warm temperatures and full sun. The most important maintenance task is keeping their growth in check. As the name suggests, these plants really do “hyacinth” across the water’s surface! Prune the plants when they cover more than 60% of the surface area. Simply remove excess plants and toss them in the compost bin or trash. With frequent thinning, water hyacinth can make a beautiful and controlled addition to any water feature.

Overwintering Water Hyacinth

Water hyacinth can be grown as a perennial water plant in zones 8–11. The plants will lose their leaves in the winter and grow back in the spring. In colder climates, water hyacinth is treated as an annual. They can be brought inside for the winter and kept in a pot for aquatic plants in bright light. Most gardeners, though, find it easier to plant new plants every spring instead of water hyacinth.

A Note on Invasiveness

Water hyacinth is notoriously invasive in warm regions if allowed to escape into lakes, rivers, and ponds Please be a responsible gardener by properly disposing of excess plants Never dump them into public waterways. With some basic diligence, you can enjoy water hyacinth as a decorative aquatic plant while keeping it from becoming a nuisance or threat to native species.

See the current distribution of water hyacinth in the United States

Why is Water Hyacinth harmful?

Water hyacinth is considered invasive throughout the world because it grows rapidly and can form thick layers over the water. These mats shade out the other aquatic plants. Eventually these shaded plants die and decay. The decaying process depletes the amount of dissolved oxygen in the water. As oxygen levels decline, many fish are unable to survive. Often the waters below water hyacinth masses become devoid of life.

After establishing in Africa’s Lake Victoria in 1989, water hyacinth eventually grew to cover approximately 77 square miles of the water body.

Dense plant mats also interfere with boat navigation and prevent fishing, swimming, and other recreational activities. Water hyacinth may also clog intake pipes used for drinking water, hydro power, or irrigation. Because the large plants have ample surface area, lake water levels may decrease due to evapo-transpiration, when water evaporates from the lake surface and is lost through plant leaves as vapor. Globally, water hyacinth is considered a serious threat to biodiversity and human health, creating prime habitat for mosquitoes which carry a variety of infectious diseases including Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus (“triple E”) and West Nile Virus.

Guide to Water Hyacinths (Beautiful Aquatic Plants)

FAQ

Where do you plant water hyacinths?

Water Hyacinths Grown in Pots: The plants need full sun in garden ponds, but they do best in pots with shade from mid- to late-afternoon.

Do water hyacinths come back every year?

Water hyacinth produces thousands of seeds each year, which can remain viable for up to 30 years.

How do you grow water hyacinth?

Water hyacinth do best in full sun and warm temperatures. Be advised that they’re invasive and will need to be thinned from time to time. Since they’re floating plants, all you need to do is remove a batch from your pond. The roots can get thick so you might need scissors to cut the plants apart.

Does water hyacinth need soil?

Choosing the right base for your Water Hyacinth’s soil mix is like picking a foundation for a house—it needs to be stable and suitable for the living conditions. Opt for an aquatic plant-specific potting mix that’s heavy enough to sink in water, avoiding lighter, floaty materials like peat or excessive compost.

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