FYI, he's the last guy on here that you want to learn from.There is a guy "mygirls" on here that has lots of pics of doing this on his threads and grow journals.
I am not vouching for anything this guys says, except for that you can succesfully re-vegg a plant and clone from flowering plants. and he had a lot of pics that i thought were applicable to the original question.FYI, he's the last guy on here that you want to learn from.
Fair enough. But it should be noted that revegging a plant that has already gone through her flower period, then cloning her, is not a best practice. It's best to keep a mom in a constant state of veg and clone as needed. But you are correct, in desperate times, desperate measures can be used with success.I am not vouching for anything this guys says, except for that you can succesfully re-vegg a plant and clone from flowering plants. and he had a lot of pics that i thought were applicable to the original question.
The nice thing about using a re-vegged plant is for one thing you know the entire history of the plant. So you know if you if it is a good producer. The second advantage is that the very nature of re-vegging, where you chop the hell out of the plant and just leave a few budding sites on the bottom branches, encourages lots of shoots going straight up. The first leaves of the new re-veg shoots are ugly as hell, just kind of rolling out of a former seed pod. I did this with a White Widow, only instead of clones, I pollinated it after re-vegging and putting back on the 12 hour cycle. The seeds were great. Just be aware that it takes weeks for the plant to bounce back and start growing again. I thought mine was dead multiple times. When it was finally matured the second time, there were probably 12 shoots pointing straight up, most of these six inches or longer. Perfect for clones.
If you really like a particular plant, and you have the time and space to veg it, I say go for it. It takes so long for the plant to bounce back, so by that time your bud is cured and smoke-able. So you really do know the entire history.
How do you know that's a genetic defect?Actually the clone will get a genetic defect from a regenerated plant. The plan will grow some wild shoots and will end real bushy. There are posts in here that will show yuo what they will look like.
This is a very funny post, I know people that have re-vegged plants for over 5 years now with no side effects at all.Actually the clone will get a genetic defect from a regenerated plant. The plan will grow some wild shoots and will end real bushy. There are posts in here that will show yuo what they will look like.