How to clone marijuana.
By Dr. Doobie.
Cloning is asexual reproduction. Cuttings are
taken from a mother plant in vegetative growth, and rooted in
hydroponic medium to be grown as a separate plant. The offspring
will be plants that are identical to the parent plant.
Cloning preserves the character of your favorite plant. Cloning
can make an ocean of green out of a single plant, so it is a
powerful tool for growing large crops, and will fill a closet
quickly with your favorite genetics.
When you find the plant you want to be your buddy for the rest of
your life, you can keep that plant's genetic character alive for
decades and pass it on to your children's children. Propagate and
share it with others, to keep a copy, should your own line die out.
A clone can be taken from a clone at least 20
times, and probably more, so don't worry about myths of reduced
vigor. Many reports indicate it's not a problem.
Cloning will open you to the risk of a fungus or pests wiping out
the whole crop, so it's important to pick plants that exhibit great
resistance to fungus and pests.
Pick the plant you feel will be the most reliable to reproduce in
large scale, based on health, growth rate, resistance to pests, and
potency. The quality of the high, and the type of buzz you get will
be a very important determining factor.
Take cuttings for clones before you move plants
from vegetative grow area to the flowering area. Low branches are
cut to increase air circulation under the green canopy.
Rooted clones are moved to the vegetative growth area, and new
clones are started in the cloning area using the low branch
cuttings. Each cycle of growth will take from 4-8 weeks, so you can
constantly be growing in 3 stages, and harvesting every 6-8 weeks.
Some types of plants are more difficult to clone than others. Big
Bud is reported to not clone very well. One of my favorite plants,
Mr. Kona, is the most amazing pot I ever smoked, but it is hard as
hell to clone. What a challenge!
I noticed other varieties that were rooting much quicker, but it
was the stone I was after! Once you find the psychoactive, almost
hallucinogenic properties of some Indica/Sativa hybrids, you never
want to smoke a pure Indica again. Indica is however, great
medicinally, so I like to grow a few pure strains too.
If a plant is harvested, you can sample it, and
decide if you want to clone it. Pick your favorite 2 or 3 distinctly
different types of plants to clone, based on trying the harvested
plants. The plants you want to clone can be regenerated by putting
them in constant light.
In a few weeks, you will have many vegetative cuttings available
for cloning and preserving your favorite plants. Always keep a
mother plant in vegetative mode for any strain you want to keep
alive.
If you flower all your clones, you may end up killing off a
strain if you don't have any plant devoted to being a mother.
I killed off a sacred strain accidentally this way; my harvested
plants failed to regenerate and the strain would have died
completely had not previously given it to friends to grow it as
well.
I was in luck, and a buddy set me up with another clone of this
strain to grow as a mother plant for a new crop of clones.
After two months, any marijuana plant can be
cloned. Flowering plants can be cloned, but the procedure may take
considerably longer.
Its best to wait, and regenerate vegetatively plants that have
been harvested. A single regenerated/harvested plant can generate
hundreds of cuttings.
Before taking cuttings, starve the plant for nitrogen for a week
at least, so that the plant is not extremely green, as this will
make rooting take longer. Take cuttings from the bottom 1/3 of the
plant, when doing ordinary pruning. Cut young growth tips from a
vegetative stage, mature plant 3-5 inches long with a stem diameter
1/5-1/10 inch.
Cut with a sterile razor blade or X-acto knife (flamed) and
immerse the cut end of the clone into a tub of distilled water mixed
with 1/4 tspn Peters 5-50-17 per gallon. Next, cut the bottom .2
inch off the end while it is submerged, using a diagonal cut.
Remove the clone from the tub and dip into a liquid cloning
solution following instructions on the label. Dust with RootToneF
and place in cloning tray or medium. Flowering plants can be cloned
too, but may take longer, and may not have as high a success rate.
Cloning goes quickest with the liquid rooting
solutions, in a warmed, aerated tray, with subdued lighting and high
humidity. Placing cuttings into 1 inch rockwool cubes in a covered
tray works great too.
In a closet, you can make space above the grow area so that the
heat of the lamp warms the tray (passive collecting) and spare the
expense and hassle of the aquarium heater ($24) or agricultural
heating pad w/ thermostat (pricey). A double 4 inch fluorescent lamp
will be perfect. Leave lamps on for 24 hours a day. Cuttings should
root in 2-3 weeks.
I found only one liquid rooting hormone solution that was not
over $10. (Olivia's Gel was $12 for a 1.6 ounce bottle. Geez, what
is this stuff, gold?) I found some dipNgrow for $9, considered
myself lucky, and got a tray and clear cover for $7.
A clear tray cover or greenhouse encloser is needed to bring up
humidity to 90% (greenhouse levels). Liquid rooting hormone seems to
be much more effective than powders. Some types available are
Olivia's, Woods, and dipNgrow.
Mix a weak cloning solution of high P plant food (such as Peter's
5-50-17), trace elements, and Epsom salts and then dip plants in
rooting solution per instructions on label. All of the above
nutrients should be added in extremely small amounts, 25% of what
would normally be used on growing plants.
Or use a pre made solution such as Olivia's Rooting Solution.
Corn syrup has been reported to supplement the sugars needed by the
plant during cloning, since it consists of plant sugars.
Use a powder fungicide too, like RoottoneF to be sure you don't
spoil the clones with fungus. This is important, since clones and
fungus like the conditions you will be creating for good rooting:
mild light, 72-80 degrees, high humidity .
In rockwool, there is no need for aerating the solution, just
keep the cubes in 1/4 inches of solution so they wick and stay moist
at all times. Try to keep clones evenly spaced, and spray them with
water once a day to keep them moist and fresh. Pull out clones if
they are diseased and dying, to keep them away from healthy starts.
Another method is to float cuttings in a tray
full of solution on polystyrene disposable plates, or styrene sheets
(shipping/packing material) with holes punched, so the tops and
leaves are out of the water. Take off all large leaves, leaving only
smaller top leaves to reduce demand on the new rooting stalk.
Aerate the tray solution with an air pump and bubble stone. Keep
solution at 72-80 degrees for best results. Change the solution
daily if not using an air stone and pump, so that oxygen is always
available to the cuttings. A week later, clip yellowing leaves from
cuttings to reduce water demands as the cuttings start to root.
Buy a tray with a clear cover made for rooting at an indoor
gardening supply house. You must keep humidity very high for the
clones. Put cuttings in an ice chest with cellophane over the top
and a light shining down if you don't want to pay for the grow tray
and cover.
It's also possible to directly place a dipped cutting in a moist
block of floral foam with holes punched, or vermiculite in a cup; be
sure to root cuttings in a constantly moist medium. Jiffy peat cubes
are not recommended, as published reports indicate results were not
good for rooting clones.
Place starter cubes in tray of solution. Check twice a day to be
sure cubes are moist, not drenched, and not dry. After about 2-3
weeks, rootlets will appear at the bottom of the pods. Transplant at
this point to growing area, taking care not to disturb any exposed
roots.
One grower writes us:
I have had virtually all attempted clones root with the following
scheme:
-- 0. Prep cutting by removing large leaves on tip
to be cut, allow to heal.
-- 1. While holding underwater, take
final diagonal cut on stem to be rooted.
-- 2. Dip in Rootone,
then spear stem about 2 inches deep in 16 oz. cups of 1/2
vermiculite, 1/2 perlite, which are kept in a stryrofoam cooler.
-- 3. Spray cuttings with a VERY mild complete fert solution.
-- 4. Cover top of cooler with Saran Wrap, then punch holes for
ventilation.
-- 5. Keep cooler in relatively mild temps, low
light, and spray cuttings daily.
-- 6. Cuttings should root in
about 3 weeks.
Cloning is not as easy as starting from seed.
With seeds, you can have 18 inch tall plants in 6 weeks or less.
With clones, it may take 6 weeks for the plant to sprout roots and
new growth.
Seeds are easily twice as fast if you have empty indoor space
being wasted that needs to be put to use quickly.
Always breed a few buds for seeds, even if you expect to be
cloning most of the time, you could get wiped out, and have nothing
but your seeds left to start over.
Cloning in rockwool seems to work great, and no airpump is
needed.
A plastic tray is available that holds 77 cubes in pockets
allowing the cubes to be held in a tray of nutrient solution. They
are easily removed and placed in a larger rockwool growing cube when
rooted.
Books
Grow Great Marijuana:
An Uncomplicated Guide to
Growing
the World's Finest Cannabis
If you find instructions and books about growing hydroponic
marijuana overly technical and hard to follow, this book is a very
good choice for simple and accurate instructions. It does not cover
advanced techniques so if you already know how to grow, this book
would be of little value. But if you are a first time grower with no
experience, this is the first book to look at.
It will explain the steps involved from start to finish (with
text and images). Includes information on where to grow, type of
hydroponic system to use, selecting a seed strain, lighting, fans,
nutrients, security, clones, vegetative growth, flowering,
harvesting, stress, pests, and more. Recommended for beginners only,
this will show you everything you need to raise a hydroponic
marijuana crop.
Grow
Great Marijuana
Marijuana Horticulture:
The Indoor/Outdoor Medical Grower's
Bible
Over 500 pages with more than 1000 color images. If you were only
going to get one book about growing, this book would be the best
choice. Describes growing marijuana outdoors and indoors (with
hydroponics or soil).
Also provides information that you can refer back to when things
go wrong. A very comprehensive reference book for anyone interested
in growing marijuana, either indoors or outdoors. Recommended for
beginners and more advanced growers.
Marijuana
Horticulture
The Cannabis Grow Bible:
The Definitive Guide to Growing
Marijuana
for Recreational and Medical Use
A very good source of information covering all aspects of
growing, from seed selection to harvest, curing and more. Over 300
pages with almost 200 color and black-and-white photographs, charts,
and tables. Recommended reference book for indoor and outdoor
growers.
A great marijuana growing and breeding guide. Includes chapters
on seeds, propagation and germination, growing indoors, growing
outdoors, hydroponics, pre-flowering and flowering, predators, pests
and plant fungi, breeding, and more.
The
Cannabis Grow Bible
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Books About Growing Marijuana
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Various Marijuana Links