Thats a rediculous!!!!..............I have been cloning the same strain for over 18 yrs...the shit is still the bomb...I average 6 oz a plant
I pull starts 6 times a year ...never kept a mother plant... your looking at the 100+ generation of clone pulled
....18x6=108th gereration (clone of a clone of a clone 108 times)
Thats some pretty looking buds... and yeh a clone(cutting) is just a continuation(rejuvenated) of the original plant as someone else said.. and if we look at the evolutionary cycle of life itself......it takes hundreds of thousands of years for any major changes in DNA to take place.... a mutation would only really happen to a plant or 2..not the whole lot... Nobody EXPECTS 100% rooting from clones anyway.
I have 2 schools of thought really on this one....
1. Keep it simple...keep it CLEAN....keep it QUIET!!...weed out the weak ones(ie only clone from the strongest/healthiest plants)
2. Dont grow yourself into a corner!!!
I dont smoke weed(please dont hate me) The enjoyment I get from just growing/OCD cloning(yeh I have a problem...just cant throw anything with a few nodes out)/building new grow areas/experimenting/fine tuning/admiring their new growth coz i havent seen them for 2 days(plus a $$$ bonus at the end) is why I love this hobby. I want to do other projects like buying seeds/clones of other strains, cross breeding to better the end product(some may fall a bit short of expectation) therefore leaving my options open should anything ever fail with my current serious grow.... plus the 'customers' will always be happy just because theyre getting the best gunj in town!!
I know that with plants there can be an Inbred Depression that will not show itself until 100's if not 1000's of generations of clone from the seed, I know this because my 91 year old Uncle was a breeder of potatoes and corn and wheat and soybeans, well you name it he bred it from around 1946 to present day. I do believe that if you were to clone a clone, and so on for 25 years you would have degradation of the basic cellular structure required to do its job properly and it would lose its vigor and potency and yield characteristics.
I think people like to assume based on facts they saw in the latest sci-fi thriller about cloning, that it is infallible, which is not the case, a plant loses something on a cellular level every single time its cloned, I do not base this on any sort of science except for what I have witnessed or been a part of first hand, and that is plants do not clone themselves in nature, the species either inbreeds if possible or if left alone in the wild chances are it will pop its own seeds as a type of defense mechanism to ensure the species is continued, if you ever have the patience and yield to experiment, try letting any strain completely mature and die on the stalk...chances are you will find seeds on the outermost edges if your strain has any hint of landrace or ruderalis genetics in it.
As for not cloning themselves in the wild... a very broad statement, have a look at
Ficus Benjamina... a pretty but shockingly pain in the ass tree that will put roots under your house and destroy your foundations....this tree drops heaps of leaves, a perfect self mulcher, mega shade causes nice moist soil under it, and if any fallen branch has green on it, it WILL shoot roots and form a happy little tree next to it... I used to be a tree surgeon and we had to keep the ficus chippings separate from our other dump piles because it takes soooo long for it to break down to the point it wont try and grow itself!!
I suppose what I was trying to say at the start of this is... Nothing beats a nice chat about our interests while we're waiting for them to grow but be careful what we tell people without any actual proven fact......but now that Ive finally finishing crapping on about part of my favourite hobby, I think it doesnt hurt to have a chat/read/contemplate/consider, maybe even pick up the odd tip(btw thanks all) but hopefully nobody is stupid enough to base an entire crop on 1 persons opinion.....aaaaaaaaaaaagh imagine the devastation
Enjoy the journey,
Troyboy