Ken, I also have to travel at least an hour to find the right habitat for Desmids. But I think it is worth the trip because the big advantage of the type of water where they live is that it will last for ever! Most desmids can be found in acid bog water. Because of the acidity it will not decay because of bacteria growth. So if you have a good sample you can keep it for a long time. I have some dishes (covered with a lit against vaporation, kept in a light but cool shadowy place) that still have a healthy community of desmids after a year!
When you go and look for desmids it is also good to know the waterplants that they often live on, like Utricularia, Myriophylletum and several other. Soggy sphagnum moss is also a good source for Desmids. I always look for the waterplants that full with green or brown growth and I squeeze the content in a jar. I also feel the sphagnum, if it is slimy it may contain desmids.
I copy the following from our dutch
www.desmids.nl site:
Remarkably, the appealing, aesthetical cell shape of desmids very well fits the environment in which they use to occur. Desmids are hardly or not to be expected in polluted waters which, in summer time, grow turbid by mass development of other unicellular algal groups. Reason for that absence is (among other things) that, under nutrient-rich conditions, desmids cannot grow as fast as other algae, so lose in competition. In contrast to that, desmids have to be looked for in clear waters, preferably in those with a luxurious, submerged vegetation of aquatics. Most promising are also small pits and moss-covered shallows in fens and bogs. In general it seems to hold that the more delicate and diversified the structure of (semi)aquatic plant vegetation, the richer and more interesting the desmid flora connected to it. So, desmidiologists are recommended to visit (aquatic) sites of natural beauty!
Due to the dependence on clear, relatively nutrient-poor waters, in large parts of the world desmids belong to the seriously threatened groups of organisms. As most of the species only occur at highly specific combinations of habitat variables, they may be considered excellent indicator organisms. As a consequense of their high environmental demands, they are very useful in monitoring conservation value in (semi)aquatic habitats.
Sorry for the long text, but I thought it could be useful information.
Wim