Buggins
Active Member
I'm not sure if this is the correct place to post this, so mods please move this thread if need be.
I've been growing quite successfully now for a while, but one aspect that I continue to fail at repeatedly is cloning. I've never been able to break about 10-20% success, most of the time losing entire batches of clones. Obviously something about my technique is seriously flawed.
I need someone to assist me in upping my cloning success, with the materials I have available. I would like to stick to a simple method of rockwool or peat pucks under a humidity dome, no bubble cloners or anything complicated until I can master the basics.
My method thus far has been to take my cuttings from healthy branches with three or more nodes. I place them in a cup of non-chlorinated tap water until I have all of my cuttings ready.
I trim away excess folliage, and then recut at the second node on a diagonal 45 degree. I then them dip them in rooting gel, and place them into the medium. I have tried both rockwool cubes soaked in ph down and superthrive with a very light dose of bloom nutes (1/8th strength), as well as peat pucks soaked in same solution with the exception of the ph down). I have also tried rockwool soaked in just ph adjusted water, and the peat pucks in water (so minus the superthrive and bloom nutes) and results were just as bad or worse.
I then place them in a standard 10x20 tray under a humidity dome with air vents, and place the tray on a heating mat. I mist the clones daily and keep the humidity high for about a week, after that, I mist less frequently, and only if they look wilty.
In two weeks, not a single clone roots. I will get to the 'barnacle' stage where bumps form on the stem, or it starts swelling up, but usually the clones die before roots actually emerge.
The problems I have been experiencing tend to occur around the 10th day or so. By this point the stem has started to rot, or the clones are wilting, or they have gone completely yellow.
I stopped scraping the bottom of the stem, and that seemed to lessen the stem rot problem somewhat, but they still end up dying anyway.
I really don't know what the hell I'm doing wrong, so hopefully someone with good cloning success can steer me straight.
Thanks in advance.
I've been growing quite successfully now for a while, but one aspect that I continue to fail at repeatedly is cloning. I've never been able to break about 10-20% success, most of the time losing entire batches of clones. Obviously something about my technique is seriously flawed.
I need someone to assist me in upping my cloning success, with the materials I have available. I would like to stick to a simple method of rockwool or peat pucks under a humidity dome, no bubble cloners or anything complicated until I can master the basics.
My method thus far has been to take my cuttings from healthy branches with three or more nodes. I place them in a cup of non-chlorinated tap water until I have all of my cuttings ready.
I trim away excess folliage, and then recut at the second node on a diagonal 45 degree. I then them dip them in rooting gel, and place them into the medium. I have tried both rockwool cubes soaked in ph down and superthrive with a very light dose of bloom nutes (1/8th strength), as well as peat pucks soaked in same solution with the exception of the ph down). I have also tried rockwool soaked in just ph adjusted water, and the peat pucks in water (so minus the superthrive and bloom nutes) and results were just as bad or worse.
I then place them in a standard 10x20 tray under a humidity dome with air vents, and place the tray on a heating mat. I mist the clones daily and keep the humidity high for about a week, after that, I mist less frequently, and only if they look wilty.
In two weeks, not a single clone roots. I will get to the 'barnacle' stage where bumps form on the stem, or it starts swelling up, but usually the clones die before roots actually emerge.
The problems I have been experiencing tend to occur around the 10th day or so. By this point the stem has started to rot, or the clones are wilting, or they have gone completely yellow.
I stopped scraping the bottom of the stem, and that seemed to lessen the stem rot problem somewhat, but they still end up dying anyway.
I really don't know what the hell I'm doing wrong, so hopefully someone with good cloning success can steer me straight.
Thanks in advance.