lightproof your cups or bottles. light is your enemy
light tight or ull get slime... and very nice job.
I cut the rootball off a lowrider male upward on an angle, and stuck it in the notch of a cutting of Casey Jones.
the top of the donor plant
I stuck the root ball and the coco to just above the join into a cup of ro water and sunk it with a support.
Lets see in a few daze
I have successfully used this method and here are the pics
it lost its lower leaves but it deff has new growth and is not wilting
Could you graft a new cutting onto the rootstock of a plant just harvested?
thats so fucken kewl man... really bro major props. im glad this method worked for sumone else besides me
I looked up root and roots do have a cambium layer. From my meager understanding of grafting you have to line up the cambium layers to get a successful graft. This is the first I've heard of grafting roots though. Does the same principal apply? The way zero.kewl has been doing it looks like it would line them up. Also whythefnot's method also. Finding out what exactly is the best way to make this work might take a little collaboration.From a biological standpoint, I would think (and have consulted with a p.h.d.) that the root would not make the correct bond as long as it's inside the plant. The new roots are grown from the outside of the stem.
Think of grafting. The new shoot has to bond to the base plant, not the other way around. The small one send out roots to anchor in the larger plant.