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Rockwool 7
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"PART III: Growing Cannabis
Chapter 7: Clones and Cuttings
7.1. Preface
In the previous chapter, we've told you what equippment you need to grow
hemp. Furthermore you've been initiated into the secrets of good climate
control to reach an optimal result. Up until now, we haven't said a word
about the living material you can use to 'rise high'(!) . . . In this chapter,
we'll look at the actual cultivation. We'll leave sprouting cannabis from
seed for what it is. We'll talk about starting with clones. It's not completely
clear why the word 'clones' has been adopted by the weed grower; we're
talking, in fact, about 'cuttings'.
7.2. Cloning hemp
Cloning hemp is a cheap, quick way to get plants. The average gardener
has taken cuttings from his/her house plants at one time or another. It's
not much different with hemp. We only have to make sure the carefully removed
cuttings from the mother plant are brought to root. A healthy mother plant
can pass on her THC-producing properties from generation to generation
by means of cuttings. Each cutting has the same properties as the mother
plant. A cutting can be taken from a cutting. And from that cutting, yet
another. There are growers who have raised 20 generations from a mother
plant this way, without diminishing the growing power of the plants. The
yield from the 20th generation is just as good as the yield from the first
one! By then, the original mother plant is long past use. Taking cuttings
causes trauma to a plant. The plant reacts by taking on a deviant form,
and by starting male branches. A third problem is regressive mutation.
The mother plant has been developed by cross breeding. With regressive
mutation, the carefully bred properties (to a degree) are lost. The quality
of the plant (and, of course, the quality of the harvest!) decreases. For
this reason, we replace the original plant with one of her fresh, healthy
daughters after 12 weeks at maximum. The ease with which hemp can be cloned
mak"
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