MAGpie81
Well-Known Member
Was once a vibrant 16inch tall plant. Fried her too long/close to a heating fan (though my Durban Poisons did fine; I thought WW liked the heat??).
She wilted over, never recovering her upper leaves so trimmed her trimmed her down at the stalk.
What you see in the pics is me cutting the last bit of growth down to a clone-size piece, adding a dab of Manuka honey to the injured part up top near new growth, then I let it sit in about 15ml of mildly warmed water well-water (pH ~6) with maybe a half-milliter of Clonex, in a jar santized with H2O2 for about 5 minutes.
From there I lightly scraped the skin from about a cm up down to the bottom, covered it with Manuka honey, then quickly sliced off, at a bias, a little more off the bottom, dipped it back in water for a moment then coated it with Manuka honey, and inserted into a Rapid Rooter plug I had sanitized with H2O2 and rinsed, that was on toothpick stilts inside a coozy-covered glass that had just enough lightly warmed weak-Clonex water to cover just the bottom of Rooter plug.
The straw is for occasionally bubbling the water with my breath, after rinsing my mouth with diluted H2O2.
I like this set up. You can remove the jar-dome, fill it with hot water and then plug it on the bottom to gently warm the plug-jar from beneath.
The jar-dome fits snugly over the bottom with the coozy, and since I then put this in a seedling tray-dome with seedlings I am watching (on a heat mat; veg-LED over the seedling area), the coozy will wick up moisture keeping the seal tight but should allow moisture to also wick out if it gets to humid in the jar.
Anyhow- poor lil’ Widow was a freebie and not really fitted for my long term plan (milder-climate greenhouse-to-outdoor) but I still have some hope I can revive her and don’t mind the experiment. Bit doubtful as well because her stem was very woody. Maybe would’ve made more sense to cut her down to just a dermal layer attached to the new growth?
I have clones rooted now in soil from the wee tops of three 4week-old Durban Poisons; used a near identical method as I’m doing with WW, so there springs my hope.
She wilted over, never recovering her upper leaves so trimmed her trimmed her down at the stalk.
What you see in the pics is me cutting the last bit of growth down to a clone-size piece, adding a dab of Manuka honey to the injured part up top near new growth, then I let it sit in about 15ml of mildly warmed water well-water (pH ~6) with maybe a half-milliter of Clonex, in a jar santized with H2O2 for about 5 minutes.
From there I lightly scraped the skin from about a cm up down to the bottom, covered it with Manuka honey, then quickly sliced off, at a bias, a little more off the bottom, dipped it back in water for a moment then coated it with Manuka honey, and inserted into a Rapid Rooter plug I had sanitized with H2O2 and rinsed, that was on toothpick stilts inside a coozy-covered glass that had just enough lightly warmed weak-Clonex water to cover just the bottom of Rooter plug.
The straw is for occasionally bubbling the water with my breath, after rinsing my mouth with diluted H2O2.
I like this set up. You can remove the jar-dome, fill it with hot water and then plug it on the bottom to gently warm the plug-jar from beneath.
The jar-dome fits snugly over the bottom with the coozy, and since I then put this in a seedling tray-dome with seedlings I am watching (on a heat mat; veg-LED over the seedling area), the coozy will wick up moisture keeping the seal tight but should allow moisture to also wick out if it gets to humid in the jar.
Anyhow- poor lil’ Widow was a freebie and not really fitted for my long term plan (milder-climate greenhouse-to-outdoor) but I still have some hope I can revive her and don’t mind the experiment. Bit doubtful as well because her stem was very woody. Maybe would’ve made more sense to cut her down to just a dermal layer attached to the new growth?
I have clones rooted now in soil from the wee tops of three 4week-old Durban Poisons; used a near identical method as I’m doing with WW, so there springs my hope.