iSnare.com - Free Content Articles Directory
Authors Contents [Advanced Search][Add OpenSearch][Job Search]
Distribute your articles to thousands of article sites for only $2 and below! Read more...

Index  Gardening
 

Making Cannabis Clones

 
[ Contact the Author] [ Send to a Friend] [ Article Publisher] [Make PDF] [ Print] [ Bookmark & Share]
 
Read our Terms of Service before reprinting this article. The submitter specified above has claimed the rights to this article.
Sjoerd Kold

The art of cloning plants could be the most useful of all ‘indoor’ techniques. Cloning allows growers to make the most of every female plant and it’s a skill that anyone can master with a little practice.

Outdoor growers who clone their plants are able to identify gender early in the season and multiply their female plants during the long vegetation period. With low-powered artificial lighting, a promising female can even be preserved for next year’s outdoor crop.

Due to its common association with indoor growing and hydroponics, cloning might appear to be a complex process. In fact, nothing could be further from the truth.

Just as cannabis seedlings will take advantage of the smallest chance to grow, cuttings will quickly make roots and become healthy small plants if a few conditions are met.

Good cuttings are made from strong, green stalks, preferably the growing shoots of the stem and branches.

If possible, cuttings should be 10-20cm long and a few millimeters thick. Avoid stems that are turning woody or hollow, as these are less likely to root. If the aim is to produce a few strong cuttings from each plant, growers should select 12cm sections of the healthiest top shoots. Larger cuttings have more energy and have a better chance of surviving.

If the aim is to make as many clones as possible, any 5-10cm piece of green stem with a growing shoot and a leaf or two can be used. A 30cm branch can be cut at each internode, making 3-6 clones. Tiny cuttings can also turn into clones, though they may take too long to grow to a decent size after rooting. Nevertheless, pieces of stem 3cm long and 1mm thick can root with vigour in bright, humid conditions.

Before planting, treat cuttings with rooting hormone in powder or gel form.

While a good soak in rooting solution is enough to get many clones started, a final treatment with a rooting aid that clings to their stems will increase success rates.

With a razor blade, make a diagonal cut to remove the last millimeters of stem, then dip the cutting in hormone powder/gel. To encourage rooting, many growers gently scrape the lower stems before dipping. A disposable safety razor is a good way to remove a couple of ultra-thin slices from the stalk.

Place treated cuttings in a moist, airy medium that holds them firmly – expanding peat tablets, a 50/50 mix of soil and perlite, cocoa-fibre or rockwool, if available. Clones have no problem rooting in a small rockwool block, then being transferred to soil.

After planting, outdoor clones are given the natural light cycle. Some growers shade rooting clones during the hottest part of the day, while others adopt a ‘survival of the fittest’ attitude. Viable clones will appreciate direct sunlight, and should root quickly.

In hot, dry climates, rooting clones may require a transparent covering to retain humidity. Keep the clones’ medium moist, but not saturated. In good conditions, clones should root in 10-20 days.

Cloning for Sex

The first clone taken from a plant can reveal the parent’s gender with 100% accuracy. It’s easy to reduce the light cycle of cuttings – allow them 12 hours of daylight, then cover them or move them to a dark area. This is much simpler than covering a single branch of a large plant to reveal gender.

When seed-plants reach 30cm, they can yield a cutting or two, which can be given a 12/12 light cycle immediately upon being planted. They will show their gender in 10-14 days, and in many cases they’ll root as well.

It’s fine if these first clones don’t become healthy small plants. Their purpose is to reveal the gender of the parent early in the season, allowing males to be eliminated and all subsequent cuttings to be taken from female plants.

As an added bonus, cloning for sex causes seed-plants to be ‘topped’ early in the season, leaving plenty of time to regenerate a strong double-stem.

Cloning to Multiply

Outdoor growers with plenty of space may clip plants to train them into huge bushes, while balcony growers often cut plants solely to restrict their size.

In both situations, cloning allows extra plants to be made from foliage that is normally discarded.

To keep a balcony plant around 1m by the end of flowering might require quite a lot of pruning. Instead of throwing away over 50% of a female plant during the growing phase, the removed foliage can be made into dozens of copies that plant, all of which will finish under the required height.

Growers who prune plants to make them large and bushy can produce huge numbers of clones. Branches are clipped at regular intervals throughout the vegetative phase to encourage them to split and grow in two directions. As plants increase their size and number of branches, each pruning will yield more cuttings than the last. While this might eventually produce more cuttings than most growers could use, remember that a rooted female clone makes a lovely gift.

Late Cloning

Indoors, cuttings are almost always taken while plants are in the growing stage, as the aim is to preserve a plant in its vegetative state. Outdoors, it is even possible to take clones during the initial weeks of flowering, when the first single flowers begin to show. Cuttings from plants that have begun to flower will often root more quickly than normal clones and should continue blooming at the same rate as the parents.

This means that even in the final, pre-flower trimming (where lower and inner branches with little budding potential are clipped), outdoor growers can clone any viable pieces of stem that are removed from plants.

Every green section of stem with a healthy internode can become a small plant when treated with kindness. Six branches cut from a medium-sized plant in July or August could be turned into 10, 20 or 30 cuttings. Even with a low survival rate of 20%, the result can be a few bonsai flowering plants.

If you’re growing outdoor plants this year and you’ve never made clones, you could try the following experiment just to see how easy it is to produce them, even if you have no particular need to multiply your harvest.

• Fill a few small pots with moist, airy soil.

• With sharp scissors, cut a few growing shoots or minor branches from your plants – nothing that you or the plant will miss – just enough to make ten or twelve cuttings of 5-10cm.

• Give the stems of the cuttings a gentle scrape with the scissors, or your fingernail (some growers use their teeth), and plant a few cuttings firmly in each pot.

• Leave the pots in the sun and make sure they don’t dry out.

• In two or three weeks, you should have a few rooted clones as a result of 20 minutes’ work.

• Any extra care and attention given to future cuttings will greatly improve their survival rate.

Important NoticeDISCLAIMER: All information, content, and data in this article are sole opinions and/or findings of the individual user or organization that registered and submitted this article at Isnare.com without any fee. The article is strictly for educational or entertainment purposes only and should not be used in any way, implemented or applied without consultation from a professional. We at Isnare.com do not, in anyway, contribute or include our own findings, facts and opinions in any articles presented in this site. Publishing this article does not constitute Isnare.com's support or sponsorship for this article. Isnare.com is an article publishing service. Please read our Terms of Service for more information.

The author is a Cannabis enthusiast who is committed to promote the environmental and social benefits of Cannabis in general and Medicinal Marijuana in particular. Please follow the link for more information on Cannabis and Hemp.

Article Tags: clones [See Dictionary], cuttings [See Dictionary], plants [See Dictionary]
Got a question about this article? Ask the community!
Article published on June 10, 2008 at Isnare.com
 
Rate this article:

Growing Inside, Outside, Hydroponically and in Soil
Submitted by: Sjoerd Kold

The advantages of growing in soil indoors The difference here is similar to the difference between indoor and outdoor cultivation...

The Basic Know-How on Having a Garden
Submitted by: Annie Deakin

Various techie gadgets and toys are taking up much of our time We are usually indoors and strapped in front of the computer or any other gaming gadgets...

Best Flowers For Your Garden
Submitted by: Annie Deakin

Thinking about starting up a garden Gardens can be very pretty...

Plant a Garden - Live Healthier
Submitted by: Annie Deakin

For a healthy and rewarding hobby one should look to planting a garden It can provide the hobbyist with a boost of Vitamin D from the sunlight of the outdoors as well as some great exercise...

A Super Fast Growing Evergreen
Submitted by: Tammy Sons

Leyland Cypress Trees Do you have noisy neighbors and would love to have a plant that helps block out the noise...

We Are Climbing Jacobs Ladder in Our Online Nursery
Submitted by: Tammy Sons

Jacob’s Ladder The name Jacob’s Ladder came from the Greek word – polemos which means war The Jacob’s Ladder is a gorgeous plant that thrives in part shady area, if you give it too much sun then it looks yellow and dingy losing its flare and appeal...

Buying White Pines Trees For a Border Evergreen From Your Local Plant Nursery
Submitted by: Tammy Sons

White Pine Pinus Strobus - Immense Harmony White Pine and Pinus Strobus are synonyms This tree is also known as Northern white pine or soft pine...

The Burning Bush Shrub,An Excellent Green in Summer,A Vibrant Red in Fall
Submitted by: Tammy Sons

Burning Bush B&B – Not The Biblical One The burning bush is a deciduous shrub also called Euonymus atropurpureus or Wahoo...

Nursery Growers Sells Cheap Pine Trees
Submitted by: Tammy Sons

Virginia Pine Pinus Virginiana B&B – The Windscreen Pine Having its scientific name as pinus viuginiana, Virginia Pine is one of the common pine shrubs that grow in the drier sites...

How to Make a Lasagna Garden
Submitted by: Annie Deakin

If you want a garden, but think that you do not have the time or energy for all that digging and weeding that it would take to get a garden spot ready, then you should consider a lasagna garden...

Be an Artist and Plant a Garden
Submitted by: Annie Deakin

The art of landscaping is a very fine art that requires full knowledge of the soil, the nature of growth forms and methods of cultivation, as well as colors of flowers to put them in place...

Gardening Design Easy As One, Two, Three!
Submitted by: Annie Deakin

Garden design defined- Many people wonder what garden design exactly entails Well, its actually a very straight forward concept consisting out of an artful process which in turn comprises of design, creation and planning precise layout of not only garden plants but also as the landscape areas self...

Plant a Garden and Better Your Health
Submitted by: Annie Deakin

If you have been looking for a new hobby then maybe one you should consider is planting a garden It can be rewarding, healthy and educating all at the same time...

Thyme For Herbs to Make an Appearance in Your Garden?
Submitted by: Annie Deakin

It can be easy to think of a garden as being nothing more than an outdoor space, and somewhere to have pretty flowers and plants on show...

The Beautiful Pink Dogwood Flowering Trees Order Today From a Mail Order Nursery
Submitted by: Tammy Sons

Pink Cherokee Chief Dogwood – Makes a great addition to any yard Does your yard lack color Does it lack a feeling of serenity and peace when it comes to your yard design...

Artificial Christmas Trees – as Good as the Real Thing
Submitted by: Michael Oims

The benefits of a real Christmas tree are obvious; they smell good and look stunning when decorated with Christmas lights and ornaments...

Isnare.com Footer Divider

© 2004-2009. Isnare Free Articles - An Isnare Online Technologies Free Articles Project. All Rights Reserved.   Privacy Policy