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| Forums > Marijuana Growing > Cannabis Growing Questions > i used plain ole h20 to clone | ||
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#1 |
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Guest
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i used plain ole h20 to clone
I Was at a Friends house and he had pruned his plants and gave me a top with two grow points i really didn't think it would survive
(it took me 25 mins to get home no water ,it wilted) when i got home i put in a 16 oz plastic drink cup with plain warm tap water (no nutes or dome ) and placed it in my kitchen window the temp in my house was 72 according to my thermostat when i came home it was thriving this is my first clone ever!!
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#2 |
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Dankslave
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 231
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While you might be sustaining the branch, it wont necessarily root - hence clone. As well, if it is just a leaf (not a branch) it is not technically a clone, because it wont produce any secondary shoots. But it sounds like you have a growing stem? I'm not sure.
If you want it to clone you can make it clone using traditional methods (even without hormone) though it will take a while. Good luck. -funker
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Untruth is a condition of life. |
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#3 |
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Guest
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i got some pics but im having a time getting my camera to cooperate its a stem with two branches comming off of it
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#4 | |
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Guest
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Quote:
Water cloning is the original cloning method |
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#5 |
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Sun DMC
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Canada
Posts: 154
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Caprichoso that is incredible! Those are some huge cuttings and they are in excellent health with extensive root systems developed. Do you add any nutrients to the water or just straight tap water? And what's the trick to keeping them so healthy? Is it because the cuttings are so big?
I've yet to find a foolproof cloning method but I used water-cloning on my first grow with good success. Since then I've been trying to root in soil, peat pellets, oasis cubes..all with rooting hormone but the results are varied. I'd like to find a method for cloning those tricky plants. Oh one last question if you don't mind Would an opaque container be a better choice? I've always heard that light is not good for a root system. thanks -sun
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i'm goin' global so folk all approach me locally. hopin' that i'll grab the mic i'm like okelly dokelly. straight ned flanders. we blaze trees and leave dead branches. -Jehst |
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#6 |
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Guest
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my cutting is about that big
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#7 |
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Banned
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Hanging with The Roach at Do Lung Bridge
Posts: 422
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Nice cuttings Cap.. funker - what are you talking about? Water cloning like stated IS the traditional way. Few clones on these boards are a true clone. If it was grown from cutting it is lacking a few fundamental plant parts and not a clone of it's donator. If you cut your arm off and kept it alive it would be an arm not a clone of you. Most "clones" are branches (unless advanced micro-tissue culture is in practice) grown as plants.
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#8 | |
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Guest
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Quote:
Give water cloning a try. If the extended rooting time screws up your room timing, take two generations of cuttings and have one always in the water rooting. They're small and dont take up much room
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#9 |
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Guest
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Oh, BTW, this method is 100% successful when you get the conditions down right. There is nearly no leaf degredation except the very lowest leaves when roots develop. You wont need a humidity dome, ever. The roots uptake all the moisture they need through the cut stem. So the method requires far less maintenance.
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#10 |
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Guest
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i got 3 new roots today no nutes, clone horm.nothing
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