Many people have heard the advice to boil aquarium roots before putting them in the aquarium. For some simpler types of wood, boiling can be used to remove dirt, reduce staining and make the wood sink faster.
For Tuskwood, the advice is different: preferably do not boil the root.
Why we do not recommend boiling Tuskwood
Tuskwood is genuine old bog wood. It has been preserved in an anoxic peat bog environment for a very long time and has been influenced by humic substances, minerals and the environment that made the wood stable.
Heavy cooking can affect the natural structure of the material. It can also interfere with the properties that make Tuskwood interesting as a bogwood: the mature surface, the slow release of humic substances and the natural rot resistance.
So it's not about Tuskwood being delicate in a fragile way. It is about respect for the material. A root that has been preserved for hundreds or thousands of years does not need to be treated like fresh problem wood.
How to prepare Tuskwood instead
Keep it simple:
- Rinse the root in ordinary tap water.
- Brush off loose peat, bark fragments and dirt with a disc brush or similar.
- Do not use chemicals.
- Soak the root if you want it to be water-saturated before it goes into the aquarium.
It does not have to be clinically clean. A little peat or natural material is not the same as dangerous dirt. The aim is to remove the loose material, not to sterilise the root.
If you still feel you need to heat treat
If there is a particular reason to heat treat, for example if the root has been handled in a way that makes you unsafe, gentle oven heat is better than boiling.
A practical level is around 70 degrees for about half an hour. It is not intended as harsh baking or drying, but as a gentle heat treatment. Never put wood of unknown origin, chemicals, varnish, oil or glue residues into the aquarium regardless of the heat treatment.
Do not leave the oven unattended, and allow the root to cool completely before handling it further.
Boiling can also provide false security
There is another reason not to make boiling the main solution. If a root is the wrong type of wood, treated, too fresh, full of easily degradable substances or comes from an unsafe environment, boiling does not automatically make it good.
Safe aquarium rooting starts with the right material and the right origin. After that, preparation is mostly about rinsing, brushing and soaking.
In short
You can boil some aquarium roots, but Tuskwood should preferably not be boiled. Rinse, brush and soak instead.
If you absolutely want to heat treat a Tuskwood root, gentle oven heat, about 70 degrees for half an hour, is a better option than boiling. But normally it is enough to simply clean the root and let it water-saturate in peace.
See also our care instructions for Tuskwood.
