You said you didn’t want to veg for ages. I was asking how you plan to keep a mother plant without vegging her for ages. I think I just misunderstood what you said.Vegging for ages is how long you veg for. A mother plant is a plant that is just kept healthy and alive for the pure purpose of cloning it. I will root prune it and repot it every so often.
You just put them through 24 hrs of dark, and started 12/12. Trimming at the same time doesnt seem like a good idea.So people, look the shade... Do I defoliate???
I was under the impression that the more you clone them and use the clones as the new mother, the weaker the plant gets. I wanted to keep the 1st clone as a mother plant to avoid this.
That's a myth guys. The clones won't lose potency over time. Have you ever heard of clone only strains? I have clone only Green Crack and Chem 91 that have been cloned for about 30 years now. I've only had mine for a year and a half though so far.It is my belief that the amount of stress from cloning (or really any stress) causes drop in potency, if you have a solid cloning technique and the plants don't stress, this drop should be negligible over a year to a year and a half.
When I grew years ago, my cloning technique (after many, many failures) was to flush the plant for a couple days before taking cuttings, then cut the clone off with scissors, then trim with a sterilized exacto blade to a 45 degree angle, and scrape the bottom inch or so of the stem, with only 2 leaves left, and then soak in water for 1/2 day or so, then place directly into my home-built bubble cloner, I did this with and without rooting hormone with great results. I always had root bumps within a week and the clones were ready to transplant into vegetative lighting about a week later. The bubble cloner had a fairly big dome to keep humidity naturally high and the leaves never drooped (the first sign of stress). I would start the clones big distance from the veg light for a couple days, slowly moving them closer until they start to grow faster. Two days or so after flushing and taking cuttings, the mother plant would be ready to go into flowering regimen.
However, I have friends that swear by keeping the one mother plants and cloning only from the original. What works for you is what's important. If you have the room to keep the one mother plant, it is a safe option as long as you can keep the mother from getting too big too fast.
When is it too late to trim please?You just put them through 24 hrs of dark, and started 12/12. Trimming at the same time doesnt seem like a good idea.
I think it's better to take a few off at a time, doing it little by little. Putting the plants through less stress. But these plants are hardy. It's more important not to stress them out much during flowering. When they're vegging it's not as important. So a quick answer to your question is it's never too late, just don't overdue it.When is it too late to trim please?
Ok thanks. I have the before pics already yesterday. I'll take a few shaders off later and take some pics. If they hermie, then I will learn something about the plants. If they don't hermie, it will just increase the chances of the genetics being kept as a mother knowing they can take a bit of stress.I think it's better to take a few off at a time, doing it little by little. Putting the plants through less stress. But these plants are hardy. It's more important not to stress them out much during flowering. When they're vegging it's not as important. So a quick answer to your question is it's never too late, just don't overdue it.
Not at all. A clone is an exact copy of the genetics of the plant the clone was taken from. You can clone a clone repeatedly with no changes.I was under the impression that the more you clone them and use the clones as the new mother, the weaker the plant gets.
That's a good idea cloning them then. It's funny coz this person that doesn't even grow was telling me all about how they get weaker over time. There's quite a bit of info on the internet. It's been mentioned many times and I just assumed that was the crack.Not at all. A clone is an exact copy of the genetics of the plant the clone was taken from. You can clone a clone repeatedly with no changes.
I don't keep mother plants anymore. In my perpetual, I cut clones from the plants that are three weeks from going into flower. These clones eventually go into veg, then they are cloned three weeks before flower. I'm on my ninth round of this procedure and the plants look just as good now as they did when I started.
I'm only doing a small number of plants each cycle, so doing it this way saves quite a bit of space in my veg tent as opposed to housing mother plants.
The problem with cloning a clone of a clone, without having a dedicated mother plant, is that of the clones become diseased you now have no mother to go back to.That's a good idea cloning them then. It's funny coz this person that doesn't even grow was telling me all about how they get weaker over time. There's quite a bit of info on the internet. It's been mentioned many times and I just assumed that was the crack.
In the winter it will be so cold that I will grow autoflowers. I will keep the mothers alive over winter, ready for the summer months.
Same could be said of the motherThe problem with cloning a clone of a clone, without having a dedicated mother plant, is that of the clones become diseased you now have no mother to go back to.
Well, I'm not in the habit of only cutting a single clone.The problem with cloning a clone of a clone, without having a dedicated mother plant, is that of the clones become diseased you now have no mother to go back to.
True. I suck at cloning...I was just passing on what a local guy who I got clones from told me when I asked him if it was better to keep a mother or to keep cloning clones. The way he put it to me made me think that issues may start in one cloned plant, be passed on to the next, and then snowball from there. I don’t have enough cloning experience to know how common that issue would be, though.Same could be said of the mother
I've been cloning from clones for years. Hundreds upon hundreds of them, quite literally. I've not run into an issue such as this.True. I suck at cloning...I was just passing on what a local guy who I got clones from told me when I asked him if it was better to keep a mother or to keep cloning clones. The way he put it to me made me think that issues may start in one cloned plant, be passed on to the next, and then snowball from there. I don’t have enough cloning experience to know how common that issue would be, though.