oh yeah, not a dehumidifier, a humidifier ($20).
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oh yeah, not a dehumidifier, a humidifier ($20).
Very creative, Jon! :thumbsup:Quote:
Originally Posted by jon.hatcher
... and it really goes to show that there's a lot of different ways to skin a cat and not necessarily any particular "right" way. A lot of it is just what you're comfortable with and what works for you.
Jerry, the whole idea behind cloning is to keep a cutting alive long enough for it to grow roots and survive on its own. As jon pointed out, it can't get any sustenance from roots it doesn't have. So, for 5-10 days you need to keep the cutting alive via its leaves, AND you have to keep the lower stem moist enough, to encourage root growth but not so wet that it rots. The leaves will also rot very easily, so you want the environment to be really humid, but you don't want the leaves to be wet. Once you get that concept straight in your head, and familiarize yourself with the basic techniques, you can adapt a whole lot of common household items to fit your purpose.
Re. the jiffy cubes - if you are talking about those peat thingies that expand when you wet them, those suck for cloning.
Re. the lights - one 26w cfl will work fine until the cuttings get some roots, then you can up it to two bulbs.
PC :smokin:
I'll take your word on only one CFL.
I am wondering why low lumens in first stages of cloning though,
I like to know just for knowledge.
Thank you everyone, this was all very useful information.
I'm not talking jiffy cubes. Jiffy pots. The ones that are like cardboard and the root grow through them so when you transplant, you just put the whole pot in and there is no harm to the plant. This helps in cloning because even after they grow some roots, they're still pretty fragile.