alwayslearning777
Well-Known Member
Hello everyone,
I am debating on keeping some motherplants, but from what I have read, perpetual cloning of clones really seems the way to go, I have read posts from people stating they have been doing in for years ... my question I have about this is more just a theory but maybe someone can help shed some light .... how does perpetual cloning tie into the Fibanachi Sequence (sorry for the spelling errors) ... meaning that since most if not all plant life follows this sequence (0,1,1,2,3,5,8,13 ... ) taking a clone at 13 and rooting it would leave me with a plant from 13 to 21 and it would just continue, each clone only being a section of the previouse, and loosing its ability to form a solid base being that it is a branch of a branch of a branch and in turn once it gets to its point where the genetics no longer allow for the cells to split ( i think i read its around 144 or something for what ever it was i was reading about... bees i think (double quotation... some bees reproduce asexualy always resulting in female offspring basicly cloning themselfs by poping the wall of there uteris and contaminating it with there own dna... or something like that im high and recalling stuff i learned Yeeaaars ago )
This is just me thinking outloud in hopes someone sort of understands what i am talking about / getting at , i am not sure i am stating my question outloud as i am thinking it in my head but any thoughts ?
I am debating on keeping some motherplants, but from what I have read, perpetual cloning of clones really seems the way to go, I have read posts from people stating they have been doing in for years ... my question I have about this is more just a theory but maybe someone can help shed some light .... how does perpetual cloning tie into the Fibanachi Sequence (sorry for the spelling errors) ... meaning that since most if not all plant life follows this sequence (0,1,1,2,3,5,8,13 ... ) taking a clone at 13 and rooting it would leave me with a plant from 13 to 21 and it would just continue, each clone only being a section of the previouse, and loosing its ability to form a solid base being that it is a branch of a branch of a branch and in turn once it gets to its point where the genetics no longer allow for the cells to split ( i think i read its around 144 or something for what ever it was i was reading about... bees i think (double quotation... some bees reproduce asexualy always resulting in female offspring basicly cloning themselfs by poping the wall of there uteris and contaminating it with there own dna... or something like that im high and recalling stuff i learned Yeeaaars ago )
This is just me thinking outloud in hopes someone sort of understands what i am talking about / getting at , i am not sure i am stating my question outloud as i am thinking it in my head but any thoughts ?