Quote Originally Posted by wildchick
Has anyone ever taken a plant in flower and tried to clone her. This plant is getting better and sweeter everyday and we noticed alot of new shoots on the bottom of plant and thought of clipping them and trying to clone them like that,,, any hints ????

Stacie

Or we thought we let her finish and put her back in veg. stage under like 18 - 6 and let her recover and clone her as this is our first female in many tries ...

HEY image reaper

what mix do you use in your milk jug for yeast and sugar to amount of warm water and do u top off water too or just sugar as needed???
as to the CO2 bottle, I keep it simple ... simple is best ... I took a 1/2 gallon plastic jug, drilled a hole (maybe 1/8" ?) in the cap ... nothing to measure, you're only 'feeding' sugar to yeast (the dying yeast cells create the CO2, as it was explained to me) ... I fill the jug half-way with water, and throw in one package of activated dry yeast, and a couple cups of sugar, after a few days, I add a bit more sugar ... after a couple cycles like that, if it doesn't fizz much when shook, I empty it and start over ... CO2 is heavier than the ambient air, so I sit mine up on top of my lamp hood ... don't know if it helps, (no visible improvement), but it's so cheap, why not ? ...
as to the cloning question, I'm experimenting right now ... I built a bubble-cloner, and it worked so well for me(100% success, so far), just for the hell of it, I took 6 more cuttings from my '6+ weeks-in flowering' Willie Nelson mother ... while my usual cuttings showed roots in 7-8 days with my bubbler, these cuttings are just starting to show roots here in day 14 ... but, they never wilted, or died ... have them in Ready-Rooter plugs at 18 hours of light ... pH'd water with one drop SuperThrive per gallon, and just recently added a very weak dose of nutes to the water ...
I would be very surprised if they grow into anything usable, but it was an experiment just for shits and giggles ... sure looks weird, a 2" tall plant with a cola, vegging