23 years!!!!!! right on. here i thought i was something with 2,5 year old moms23 yrs...same strain... no moms just clones right at onset
That's true, they are subject to thier respective environments. But the point is they have the same gentics - the exact same DNA! For example, a slice of skin off your toe has the same DNA as a slice of skin off your ear. Your brother (or sister) will have, very nearly, the same DNA; but not quite!It may be the same plant, but they all grow as individuals unfortunately.
That is amazing. I am learning with schwag. I had a chipmunk pull every seed, out of a peat pot tray. If they were 20 a pop, I would have been screwed.23 yrs...same strain... no moms just clones right at onset....over 100 times clone of a clone of a clone
Thanks for the info!!!! Also everyone else's comments!!!! Could crappy conditions effect the DNA of subsequent clones?That's why I said "It is logical to think that way". Like you said, a Xerox copy, of a copy, etc., etc. will deffinately degrade, no doubt! But a cutting of a plant is a continuation of the same plant, not a "copy". There is no "copying" of DNA, so there is no degradation - there is just a continuation of growing the same plant (in a different spot)!
I understand that there is a difference of opinion on this subject, but I wasn't aware that there was a real "Debate". It seems like a one sided argument; on the one side you have the people like me and the guy who has been growing the same "Plant" for 23 years - and on the other side you have people that say "It just don't seem right!". I'm really not trying to stir up an argument; it's just that I've never heard any explaination, or reason (that made any sense) why the DNA would degrade based on generations of cloning.
The conditions you have mentioned all amount to nothing more than "bad growing conditions". They would, of course, affect the growth of any plant growing under those conditions, but have no effect on the DNA.- - - - Could crappy conditions effect the DNA of subsequent clones? - - - - Just wondering if dehydration, high PH, and other screw up's with real seeds and plants, could effect future generations.