homebrewer
Well-Known Member
Yeah, far-leaning sativas aren't going to finish outdoors in the north. Cuttings are a good idea and you could always try digging them up when it gets too cold but from a sanitation perspective I don't know if that's the best thing for your grow room. But hey, if they're not going to finish you might as well try.HB,
I noticed in another thread your comment about Sativa. I planted from 20 yr old seed, a dozen pure sativa plants at the beginning of July. It's now nine weeks later and they are doing fine, but I have stressed them to keep the height down. One very large one showed male with little bunches of grape-like clusters last Friday. The rest so far look like females w/ just a hint of pre-flowers.
You mention the long flowering cycle of Sativa and I've seen others talk about 100 days or more in flower to harvest. That means I am looking at the middle of January at the earliest. The climate in Pennsylvania will have long killed off the plants by then. Aside from taking cuttings and making clones, which I have had very poor luck doing (out of 50 more only one cutting showed rootlets and that one was an Air layered lower branch. None that I severed from the plants have shown any inclination to root.
If I were to dig up several of them to get most of the root ball, and put them in my grow room by the end of October, do you think that would be the kind of stress that would make them all but useless?
I am still taking cuttings and trying to get more clones but I don't yet know how they are going to turn out. Do you take cuttings of your sativa and if so, how do you do it?
Any reply would be very helpful.
As for cuts, I take all cuttings in the same way. I take healthy, well hydrated mother plants and cut a few 3 - 4 inch lower growth shoots, dip them in Dip-N-Grow, and then place in 1 inch rockwool cubes in a humidity dome. Keep the rockwool moist and you should get roots in a couple weeks.