I have a lot of bag seed I'm going through looking for my favorite strains to grow, but i'm having some problems getting any clones to root.
I made this really cheap bubble cloner, but nothing has rooted in it.
The cheap cloner is just a Tupperware container full of plain tap water, with an air-stone in it.
This is the mother plant I am trying to clone, which is now about 1.5 weeks into flower. It looks a little funny in this pic cause I had just removed LST tiedowns and watered it. It had some problems as a seedling but seems fine now.
Here is the bubble cloner I made, I know its ghetto as fuck, I was trying to build a sort of prototype so I could see rather i wanted to go with this or build an aerocloner which will be a slightly bigger pain in the ass. I've heard that the strike rates of the 2 are virtually identical. As you can see, all of them have a pretty marked loss of pigment. Some of the leaves curl up on the edges and die. There is also a cherry tomato plant in there which i'm kinda using as a control. The roots on it are developing pretty well, but as you can see, the tops look very similar to the dying clones. I ran into a problem the first time I put clones into it where the stems developed large balls of brown slime on the tips. Didn't know what it was, but I started adding a cap of hydrogen peroxide to the water every day for about a week, wiped the slime off the stems and it went away quickly, but the roots never came. I've since completely sanitized the reservoir several times and used nothing but plain tap water changed out once a week and the problem hasn't reoccurred:
This is an additional control. Cherry tomato plant. This one is grown in ffof soil from seed. Anyways, Same discoloration and leaf problems. With this control I'm starting to suspect I'm having a lighting issue. Upon reflection, nothing has ever really been healthy under these lights I have.
This is another experiment. I am attempting to isolate a clone from all of the conditions affecting the other clones to get another basis for comparison. This is just a tiny clone in a glass of plain tap water. Its been there for about 4 days. I can see very very tiny hairlike structures, but i'm uncertain whether they are roots or just pieces of cellulite breaking off the soaking stem. I'm just leaving this one on my computer desk getting only ambient lighting. Basically, I'm just trying to get one freaking clone to root as a baseline for what works. (or what can work): being that the mother is already pretty well into flower, is it too late to take clones from her? I mean I know you can revert a cutting back to veg, but if I can't get vegetative clones to root what are the chances I get a clone to revert to veg and survive right?
The other thing I wanted to cover is the lighting. The fixture I made out of an old bucket holds 6 regular lightbulbs, so I have (3) 23watt CFL (Daylight) bulbs and I also run one warm white 23 watt bulb just cause it feels right to have a fuller spectrum. The bulbs are very close together and the top of the plants is about 6" from the bulbs. so any guesses as to whats happening here?
I made this really cheap bubble cloner, but nothing has rooted in it.
The cheap cloner is just a Tupperware container full of plain tap water, with an air-stone in it.
This is the mother plant I am trying to clone, which is now about 1.5 weeks into flower. It looks a little funny in this pic cause I had just removed LST tiedowns and watered it. It had some problems as a seedling but seems fine now.
Here is the bubble cloner I made, I know its ghetto as fuck, I was trying to build a sort of prototype so I could see rather i wanted to go with this or build an aerocloner which will be a slightly bigger pain in the ass. I've heard that the strike rates of the 2 are virtually identical. As you can see, all of them have a pretty marked loss of pigment. Some of the leaves curl up on the edges and die. There is also a cherry tomato plant in there which i'm kinda using as a control. The roots on it are developing pretty well, but as you can see, the tops look very similar to the dying clones. I ran into a problem the first time I put clones into it where the stems developed large balls of brown slime on the tips. Didn't know what it was, but I started adding a cap of hydrogen peroxide to the water every day for about a week, wiped the slime off the stems and it went away quickly, but the roots never came. I've since completely sanitized the reservoir several times and used nothing but plain tap water changed out once a week and the problem hasn't reoccurred:
This is an additional control. Cherry tomato plant. This one is grown in ffof soil from seed. Anyways, Same discoloration and leaf problems. With this control I'm starting to suspect I'm having a lighting issue. Upon reflection, nothing has ever really been healthy under these lights I have.
This is another experiment. I am attempting to isolate a clone from all of the conditions affecting the other clones to get another basis for comparison. This is just a tiny clone in a glass of plain tap water. Its been there for about 4 days. I can see very very tiny hairlike structures, but i'm uncertain whether they are roots or just pieces of cellulite breaking off the soaking stem. I'm just leaving this one on my computer desk getting only ambient lighting. Basically, I'm just trying to get one freaking clone to root as a baseline for what works. (or what can work): being that the mother is already pretty well into flower, is it too late to take clones from her? I mean I know you can revert a cutting back to veg, but if I can't get vegetative clones to root what are the chances I get a clone to revert to veg and survive right?
The other thing I wanted to cover is the lighting. The fixture I made out of an old bucket holds 6 regular lightbulbs, so I have (3) 23watt CFL (Daylight) bulbs and I also run one warm white 23 watt bulb just cause it feels right to have a fuller spectrum. The bulbs are very close together and the top of the plants is about 6" from the bulbs. so any guesses as to whats happening here?