Assumptions can keep a person from learning proper technique. Don't assume anything, and seriously...do not pretend knowledge if there is none.

A plant's genes can be seen as a private diary of enviornment, stressors, and what that particular plant did to thrive and survive...but only successive generations can read that diary. A clone is not a successive generation plant. It's a carbon copy.

A clone can not alter it's 'diary' to fit unfamiliar circumstances unless it's been there and done that, or unless it can find a response that is similar in it's 'diary'. But it can and possibly will add to it's passed-on genetics, but this takes MANY MANY exposures to this enviornment, many successes and failures and MANY MANY generations to truly alter the plant's response in ANY direction, let alone a direction of YOUR chosing. Just try and un-hermie a hermie-prone strain and see how far you get. Or try and outbreed the autoflower from a autoflower x landrace cross...

Your clones are not 'learning' from it's experiences in your growroom. Were that the case, some of us would have perennial cannabis plants in our growrooms instead of annuals. Especially those of us that re-veg. Grow some out, and pollinate 'em, and that's your first step. The best you can hope to do is to nudge the plants in a particular direction through selective breeding. But there is a limit to this, too.

Clones and seeds need the genetic diversity to evolve and adapt. An overcloned plants metabolic age will eventually get too old and tired to properly grow. Remember...it's main job is to reproduce. Eventually their system will 'give-up'. The things that make you love the strain...will fade and mutate into hemp-quality garbage eventually. (a very slight exaggeration, but it's the best I can do with this headache)

I think you had better read-up more on PROPER growing/cloning and transplanting techniques, as you are setting yourself up for a BIG disappointment. Might not be this grow, might not be the next...but imporper techniques WILL catch up to you. Usually at the worst possible time.

Hit the 'ENTER' key after every few sentances, or just before you start a new thought. Even if you do it wrong, at least it's easier for everyone to read.