bodhi seeds

GreenTools

Well-Known Member
That's cool. Where'd you get yours from? Just curious.
One of the distributors here in the U.S. most likely. We have tons of stuff going back to the "Snow Lotus" days in the fridge, and one of my locals just moved back from Tahoe and he gave me a bunch of stuff I threw in the fridge without looking at yet....so may be some even older stuff in there....
 

Uprangewilly

Well-Known Member
Thanks!

GLG email just landed…. Maybe before tomorrow you can let me know what you think of the 88g13/hp crosses..? Haha.

For no reason but the name I'm going to have to pick up that Mom's Lemon Cream Pie. Can’t decide between Black Triangle, Old Soul, BBHP, SSH…. The list goes on.
Sorry for the late reply Grumpyy. I honestly have never grown or smoke any of the 88g13hp. I have few packs of them, but have not ran them yet. I am currently running sour butter x 88g13hp.

I really don’t think you can go wrong with any of Bodhis packs.
 

Bad Karma

Well-Known Member
This whole cloning budding plants thing is throwing me for a loop. If you can point me in a direction as to whether it's good or bad to cut off buds, I'd love to read up on it.
Keep the buds attached to the clones, it will be reabsorbed by the plant, usually around the time new growth starts showing up.

I’ve experimented with late flower cloning myself.
In my experience, revegging the plant has ended up being the better way to go, in terms of success rate, and time spent.
I’ll take a cutting off of a plant as late as 4-5 weeks into flower, but after that, if I want to keep her around, I’ll reveg her.

Also, I’ll take cuttings off the revegged mom, to eventually put into flower. But I never put revegged plants back into flower, it never works out good, yields are always diminished.
 

MissinThe90’sStrains

Well-Known Member
Also, I’ll take cuttings off the revegged mom, to eventually put into flower. But I never put revegged plants back into flower, it never works out good, yields are always diminished.
Anecdotal experience of 1 here - but I kept a plant I liked last year and revegged it in its 15 gallon pot. It started getting to be decent size and didn’t want to kill it after taking cuts. I gave it to a friend and guided him through flowering it. He completely filled his 4x4 tent with it and scrogged it. I pulled 5 oz from it sitting in the corner of my tent. He didn't weigh his final tally, but I’d estimate that he pulled at least triple that, with the larger space. Bud was still really good too for a first timer, even with taking directions over text/pics.
 

Tolerance Break

Well-Known Member
Anecdotal experience of 1 here - but I kept a plant I liked last year and revegged it in its 15 gallon pot. It started getting to be decent size and didn’t want to kill it after taking cuts. I gave it to a friend and guided him through flowering it. He completely filled his 4x4 tent with it and scrogged it. I pulled 5 oz from it sitting in the corner of my tent. He didn't weigh his final tally, but I’d estimate that he pulled at least triple that, with the larger space. Bud was still really good too for a first timer, even with taking directions over text/pics.
Keep the buds attached to the clones, it will be reabsorbed by the plant, usually around the time new growth starts showing up.

I’ve experimented with late flower cloning myself.
In my experience, revegging the plant has ended up being the better way to go, in terms of success rate, and time spent.
I’ll take a cutting off of a plant as late as 4-5 weeks into flower, but after that, if I want to keep her around, I’ll reveg her.

Also, I’ll take cuttings off the revegged mom, to eventually put into flower. But I never put revegged plants back into flower, it never works out good, yields are always diminished.

I would reveg, but I'm growing flood and drain and I gave my next round of flowers rooting right now, so I can't really justify swinging 6 weeks of res changes after harvest.

If my experiment works, great, if not, so be it.
 

MissinThe90’sStrains

Well-Known Member
I would reveg, but I'm growing flood and drain and I gave my next round of flowers rooting right now, so I can't really justify swinging 6 weeks of res changes after harvest.

If my experiment works, great, if not, so be it.
I’ve successfully taken cuts 5 weeks into flower and then revegged those cuts too. Same basic process. Nature wants to find a way.
 

toomp

Well-Known Member
This whole cloning budding plants thing is throwing me for a loop. If you can point me in a direction as to whether it's good or bad to cut off buds, I'd love to read up on it.
As it's new territory for me, I honestly don't know.

I cut the buds off half of them, leaving the actual node there, and, after reading some of the comments, decided to leave the other half alone. However, the comments seem to be coming from a reveg experience, and what you and I are doing isn't just revegging; we are also rooting, so I'm worried about the additional energy the cuts are consuming to continue to bud because they will grow larger before they start to reveg, mine are at least, as it adjusts to the new cycle. We should learn more later; both parties are days away from one another. Long as I get roots I have a plant
 

indican3

Well-Known Member
I’ve successfully taken cuts 5 weeks into flower and then revegged those cuts too. Same basic process. Nature wants to find a way.
Cloning imo from experience is a healthy cutting wants to clone no matter what, so if the cloning setup is good there should be no problems.

The trouble cloning flowering plants is typically with my grows that the cuttings aren't as healthy as cuttings from veg, because stems are more hardened, or plant might be running low on nutrients/root bound.

For example I've "successfully" cloned a flowering cutting before but by the time it rooted (and it was a nice a healthy root) the leaf foliage all died back and it had nothing left.

Revegging a plant in its original container can be easier also because you already have so much established roots, and you just harvest the top 1/2 or 2/3rds of the plant and leave the bottom of the plant re-grow. And yea once it starts to reveg, take a new cutting, clone it and veg that out, throw away old plant.

As it's new territory for me, I honestly don't know.

I cut the buds off half of them, leaving the actual node there, and, after reading some of the comments, decided to leave the other half alone. However, the comments seem to be coming from a reveg experience, and what you and I are doing isn't just revegging; we are also rooting, so I'm worried about the additional energy the cuts are consuming to continue to bud because they will grow larger before they start to reveg, mine are at least, as it adjusts to the new cycle. We should learn more later; both parties are days away from one another. Long as I get roots I have a plant
The bud won't keep growing really it's more that any remaining bud will start to finish off and ripen then go brown-ish.

Because it’s on topic here’s a plant I just revegged this past couple months

IMG_3454.jpegIMG_3628.jpegIMG_3625.jpegIMG_3694.jpeg
 
Last edited:

Tolerance Break

Well-Known Member
As it's new territory for me, I honestly don't know.

I cut the buds off half of them, leaving the actual node there, and, after reading some of the comments, decided to leave the other half alone. However, the comments seem to be coming from a reveg experience, and what you and I are doing isn't just revegging; we are also rooting, so I'm worried about the additional energy the cuts are consuming to continue to bud because they will grow larger before they start to reveg, mine are at least, as it adjusts to the new cycle. We should learn more later; both parties are days away from one another. Long as I get roots I have a plant
I've got a fresh batch of clones from a totally different plant moving to their forever homes (4inch rockwool cubes) in the coming days, so I'll be okay regardless. This is purely for education, preservation, and fun.

I'll keep the thread posted as I near harvest and as the clones progress.
 
Top