LearyRed
Member
So you want to clone your nice plant do you?
And maybe you've been running around the forum, looking up rooting hormone posts, and if it's necessary or not to have rooting hormone?
And then you went onto wondering which medium would be the best, peat pucks, rock wool maybe?
How about instead you rinse out that old 24 of beer bottles you have sitting around the house, and get to work cloning that plant right now? Huh sketchy? Can you calm down for a minute and do that for me? Good!
Simply take a beer bottle
Rinse it out, fill it up with cold tap water
Take your plant
Select a shoot from a true node (one with 2 shoots coming out at the same level)
Cut it on an angle \
Cut off the smaller leaves towards the bottom of the cutting, leaving the bigger top leaves
Place it in the beer bottle, making sure the stem is submerged in water, and change the water ever 4-7 days.
***(I don't even tweak the cutting under water first, but you can, by placing the cutting under water, and rolling the stem between your fingers near the cut to push out any air bubbles that tried to get up the stem, which could kill your cutting)***
You'll have roots in 7-10 days normally. They start off as small white bumps on the green stem, once the white bumps start, you can technically plant it.
Some slime, or web looking stuff is normal by the way. It's really just a sign to change the water!
**EDIT** Forgot to add that brewers make beer bottles brown or green to keep out light, and prevent photosynthesis in the bottle. That's half your job done for you!
Congratulations! You've accomplished what humans have been doing since the dawn of agriculture, cloning in WATER!
I know, it's crazy talk, I mean NO HORMONES!? But trust me, it works, cause the plant makes its own.
Pics provided are of month old heavily abused clones. They've sat in stagnant water for 2 weeks, and then were given a 1/6th strength hydroponic solution for a few days to keep them alive. Then it was left too long and allowed to get calcium toxicity... BUT! They grew roots, and even bigger leaves and shoots!
And maybe you've been running around the forum, looking up rooting hormone posts, and if it's necessary or not to have rooting hormone?
And then you went onto wondering which medium would be the best, peat pucks, rock wool maybe?
How about instead you rinse out that old 24 of beer bottles you have sitting around the house, and get to work cloning that plant right now? Huh sketchy? Can you calm down for a minute and do that for me? Good!
Simply take a beer bottle
Rinse it out, fill it up with cold tap water
Take your plant
Select a shoot from a true node (one with 2 shoots coming out at the same level)
Cut it on an angle \
Cut off the smaller leaves towards the bottom of the cutting, leaving the bigger top leaves
Place it in the beer bottle, making sure the stem is submerged in water, and change the water ever 4-7 days.
***(I don't even tweak the cutting under water first, but you can, by placing the cutting under water, and rolling the stem between your fingers near the cut to push out any air bubbles that tried to get up the stem, which could kill your cutting)***
You'll have roots in 7-10 days normally. They start off as small white bumps on the green stem, once the white bumps start, you can technically plant it.
Some slime, or web looking stuff is normal by the way. It's really just a sign to change the water!
**EDIT** Forgot to add that brewers make beer bottles brown or green to keep out light, and prevent photosynthesis in the bottle. That's half your job done for you!
Congratulations! You've accomplished what humans have been doing since the dawn of agriculture, cloning in WATER!
I know, it's crazy talk, I mean NO HORMONES!? But trust me, it works, cause the plant makes its own.
Pics provided are of month old heavily abused clones. They've sat in stagnant water for 2 weeks, and then were given a 1/6th strength hydroponic solution for a few days to keep them alive. Then it was left too long and allowed to get calcium toxicity... BUT! They grew roots, and even bigger leaves and shoots!
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