How to Clone Weed Plants [Do It the RIGHT Way!]

Having the ability to clone cannabis plants should be considered a bonus if you wish to become a successful grower. In gardening and agriculture, plant cloning involves taking a sample from an existing plant. Next, you expose it to a stimulating environment and ample nutrients to ensure you grow a ‘copy’ of the original.

When cloning cannabis plants, you can select plants with outstanding qualities to ensure that their strengths are passed on.

Marijuana growers choose this technique because of the array of benefits of cloning a plant versus growing from a seed. Cloning is a reliable method of improving your harvest and yields without compromising potency.

However, you can only clone once you know which plants are the healthiest and most successful. You must also be able to differentiate between ‘male’ and ‘female’ plants. For the record, a single mother plant is capable of producing over 50 clones a week!

While the marijuana growing process has no guarantees, cloning is about as close as you’ll get. Plus, it is easier to do than you think! So, without further ado, let’s discuss marijuana plant cloning.

Ultimate Answers to the Questions: “What Is Cloning?” and “Why Do You Need to Clone Cannabis Plants?”

Cloning your cannabis involves using a clipping of a mature plant and moving it somewhere else to grow by itself. Cloning sounds exceptionally sophisticated, but you identify a productive marijuana plant, take a sample, and grow it elsewhere! The cloning process is also known as ‘asexual reproduction.’ The clones you grow are rooted cuttings that are genetically identical to the marijuana plant you took them from.

It is one of two ways to breed cannabis. The other method involves sexual reproduction, which involves crossing a male plant with a female one via pollination. This process creates new seeds that are then planted to produce a genetic hybrid of the two ‘parent’ plants.

Benefits of Cloning

  • Consistent Growing: Clones are copies of a specific marijuana plant, so they share the same genetics. They grow similarly to one another and to the mother plant. You will know how to take care of them, as it’s the same process as growing the mother plant. Therefore, you know the yields you can expect, the scent, taste, and bud potency.
  • Inexpensive: Cloning supplies are not expensive, and it is almost ‘free’ otherwise.
  • Convenient: While some clones root quicker during the vegetative stage, you can take clones up until a fortnight before harvest. You may see some unusual growth for the first couple of weeks on clones you take from flowering plants.
  • Speed: Clones have an automatic head-start compared to their seedling counterparts. Every clone begins at the same age as the parent plant, which means it is mature when you start the process. Naturally, cloned plants grow extremely fast during the first few weeks.

Experienced cloners claim that it is best practice to take the bottom branches of a parent plant. The reason for this is that they usually receive less light and are more likely to wither if left alone. Let’s say you take four of each of a parent plant’s bottom branches and use them to create clones. Theoretically, this simple tactic quadruples your harvest!

Downsides of Cloning

It would be remiss of us to suggest that cloning was a ‘perfect’ solution. While it is effortless in theory, the practice of cloning doesn’t always end up as it should. If you are an outdoor grower, you’ll get the most out of cloning in regions with longer growing seasons. Regardless, it is unlikely that your clones will ever reach their potential in terms of height.

They grow faster than seedlings in the first few weeks. However, they will only begin growing around three months into the growing season when the parent plant is mature. On the plus side, you can still benefit from a fantastic yield from short clones.

The cloning process is considered to be risk-free because it does not harm the health of the parent plant. However, it is essential to know that clones have a low survival rate. Don’t be surprised if 90% of your clones die.

How to Clone Cannabis Plants from Your Garden

The most challenging step is, arguably, selecting mothers to clone. It is the cornerstone of the entire process, so don’t rush it and pick the first healthy plant you see!

Analyze your plants, and choose the one that is tough, fast-growing, offers excellent yields, and has healthy buds and large roots.

Before making the first cutting, please ensure that your plant is in a vegetative state. Although you can take a plant during the flowering stage, it is harder for it to take root. This increases the mortality rate. If you are a first-time cloner, you won’t have enough knowledge or extensive growing experience to determine your best options.

In this case, pick a female in its vegetative state which appears to be in good health. We also recommend cloning plants from regular seeds rather than using feminized seeds. Remember, a cannabis plant only produces feminized seeds when it is stressed. If you pick plants from such seeds and stress them again, there is a chance that they will become hermaphrodites.

Your choice of mother plant must be at least two months old. Your best chance of success comes by picking a plant that has been in its vegetative state for three months. By exercising this level of patience, you can get several clones from a single plant. Make sure the plant you choose receives around 10% less nitrogen than usual in the fortnight before taking the clipping. This tactic increases the chances of successful rooting.

You will also need a few select pieces of equipment for the cloning process, including:

  • Water
  • A rooting medium
  • A razor (This is a better option for taking cuttings than scissors because the latter is capable of crushing branches. A blade should help you get a clean cut)
  • A rooting hormone

You will also require the following during the cloning process:

  • Paper towels
  • Duct tape
  • Sterile gloves
  • Several 16-ounce plastic cups, preferably in clear and red colors
  • 99% isopropyl alcohol
  • pH meter
  • Grow journal
  • Permanent marker to create clear labels
  • Bleach wipes

7 Steps to Prepare Your Mother Plants for Cutting:

cloning cannabis

  • Withhold Fertilization: Do this in the days before you take your cuttings from the mother plant. It is a necessary step to help the nitrogen exit the leaves of the plant. Too much nitrogen in the stems and leaves tricks the clones into going through the vegetation phase instead of rooting.
  • Avoid Stressing the Plant: Ideally, you will perform all of the work in a sterile environment. This is necessary to prevent your mother plants and cuttings from being agitated.
  • Choose Healthy Lower Branches: In most cases, cuttings of 8-10 inches with several nodes are ideal. If you’re using Rockwool as your planting medium, match the stem with the cubes’ rooting hole for a correct fit.
  • Cut Close to the Main Stem: The best way to take your clippings is to use a razor. Experienced growers recommend cutting at a 45-degree angle to the branch. This boosts the rooting space’s surface area and ensures quicker growth.
  • Add the Cutting to Water ASAP: If you wait too long, bubbles could form in the stem and stop water from being absorbed. This will kill the clone. It has been suggested that adding extra cuts in the stem before placing it in water improves rooting potential.
  • Clip the Leaves: Once you have transferred several cuttings to water, clip the leaves for better photosynthesis. This also helps rooting if you offer a cleaner environment. Trim the fan leaves halfway down the stem; you can use scissors for this step. Remove unnecessary leaves near the bottom to prevent them from taking crucial nutrients and water. It also stops leaves from touching each other.
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Choose the Right Rooting Medium

There are three main rooting mediums.

1 – Rockwool Cubes (Or Non-Soil Equivalent)

Rockwool cubes are ideal for clone rooting because they offer excellent moisture retention and outstanding airflow. You will find them in practically every grow store in the United States and on countless websites. Place the clippings in a cube beneath a CFL light.

Ideally, the surrounding temperature will be between 72 and 77 degrees Fahrenheit with a humidity of 90% or more. Under such conditions, roots will begin showing in a maximum of 12 days. Soak the cubes in the water at a pH of 5.5 for a few hours before use.

2 – Transporting Your Clones into Soil

Don’t make the mistake of choosing soil with a ton of nutrients. Avoid adding too much or too little water to the soil during the rooting process. As you need the clone to use all its energy for sprouting roots, remove mature leaves on the stalk. Wet the sliced stalk and dip it into the rooting hormone. Next, stick the plant into the soil beneath CFL lights and leave it there as the roots form.

3 – Root in Water

This is the easiest option, as you don’t need rooting mediums or hormones. Just add the cutting to water and ensure it stays there until it grows. Once again, remove the cutting’s mature leaves and place the clone in a 16-ounce container that you fill with water. Make sure the water has at least been treated with plant food.

Submerge the plants’ stalks in water and check every few days for algae growth. Change the water if you spot any algae. It is best to keep sunlight exposure below normal levels until leaves begin growing at the top. Commonly, these leaves grow at the same time as the roots.

Once there are enough roots, it is time to transplant.

There are also automated units that provide oxygen, light, and water to your clones without you lifting a finger. If you can afford the prohibitive cost, they are an excellent investment.

The Rooting Process

If you follow these steps, your clones will be rooted in 7-10 days. First of all, make sure you label each clone clearly. If there are several strains and you don’t mark them, it is easy to make mistakes. This could potentially lead to the demise of your precious crop. The following is the ‘Rockwool or non-soil’ method.

You need the following equipment:

  • Cloning tray
  • Razor blade
  • Cloning gel/powder
  • A pair of small plastic buckets
  • Spray bottle
  • 7-inch vented dome
  • Rockwool cubes, peat pellets, or another non-soil option
  • Grow lights

Day 1

Fill one of the buckets with warm water and add the non-soil substitute. For example, Jiffy 7 peat pellets are useful because they expand in size when submerged in water. Place the pellets in the water and wait for them to swell. Remove them one at a time and squeeze out excess water. Place the pellets in a cloning tray and add the trimmed cuttings.

Dip the cuttings into a rooting hormone and insert each one into a pellet. Rockwool cubes are probably a more straightforward option because they have a tiny hole built-in for clones. Add about 5 ml of water to the pellets to activate the hormone. Spray the cuttings with water and place them under your light source. Place the dome on the tray and make sure the cuttings are now inside.

If you use CFLs, place the light 1-2 inches above the top of the dome. If you use Metal Halide lights (preferably 400w or 600w), keep the light two feet away from the dome’s apex. Please ensure that the dome’s vents are closed for the first 48 hours. Remember, the temperature of the grow room should be between 72 and 77 degrees Fahrenheit.

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Day 2

Remove the dome from the tray and spray the inside of the dome and cuttings with water. Replace the dome and repeat the above process at least once more each day. This step is crucial because the water dilutes the leaves’ nutrients, forcing the clones to search for them. It also keeps water levels more consistent because the plant is unable to drink through the roots.

Day 3

Complete the spraying process twice. Next, open the dome vents. This is also the day we want to dry out the pellets. When moisture escapes, small roots will be forced to grow quickly as they look for moisture.

Day 4

Follow the same process as on day 3. By this point, all of your clones should be standing independently.

Day 5

Check to see if the pellets are dry to the touch. If they are, add 500ml of water to the tray, where the pellets will absorb the water. This continues to force the roots to seek water and also makes them move down to find moisture, ensuring faster rooting.

Day 6

Close the dome vents and continue spraying twice a day. You may see some roots breaking through the pellets. By closing the vents, you are creating a high level of humidity as the water in the tray is trapped.

Day 7

At least half of the clones should be showing roots by now. Make sure the dome vents stay closed, as you need to maintain high humidity for the rest of the process.

Days 8-9

In most cases, almost all of the roots will be visible. Add 500ml of water with a small amount of added nutrients to the tray. This is a crucial period because roots could treble in size in 24 hours.

Day 10

Remove the dome to help the clones adjust to normal humidity. All of the roots should be visible now and ready for transplanting.

Transplanting of Roots

Once you see vegetative growth on your clones, it is essential to transplant them into bigger containers. There is a danger of ‘transplant shock.’ This may kill your clones, so make sure you use a high degree of care and sanitation during this process. If you have ever transplanted seedlings during the growing season, you have the knowledge needed for clones rooted in soil.

Things are a little different if you rooted the clones via the water method. The first step is to dig a hole around 12” wide and 12” deep. Move the container holding the clone and its water to the site. Never expose roots to the air! Put your plant in the freshly dug hole. Fill the gap with potting soil combined with the dirt you dug up. Pat the soil down and use two liters of water combined with plant food to water the area.

Clones that have taken root have a decent chance of survival because their parent plants were vigorous and mature.

Hopefully, your clone will reach the flowering stage within three months. Don’t be shocked or dismayed if the clone is of a different sex to the parent plant. This is a common occurrence.

How to Introduce Cannabis Clones

Clones are a fast and easy way to introduce new genetics into your garden. Unfortunately, clones also bring many problems. For a start, they can ruin your entire grow if you get it wrong. While you should be able to find a reputable clone source, e.g., your local dispensary, it isn’t always that easy.

Find a Trusted Source of Clones

Finding a reputable seller is one thing, but finding out the source of your clone is a different matter entirely. You should be able to purchase clones from a nursery or a local dispensary. They usually acquire their clones from in-house sources. Occasionally, they may get these cuttings from a third party, which is where the trouble begins.

No matter who the purveyor is, ask them where the clones were brought from.

If you don’t get a clear answer, take your business elsewhere. A lack of knowledge about the origins of your clones is a red flag. If you bring home a mystery clone, you know nothing about the pests it attracts, its susceptibility to disease, whether it carries pesticide residue, or if it was appropriately labeled. Introducing these types of clones to your garden could kill all of the plants.

Growing & Inspecting Clones

It is tricky to spot issues such as pesticides, pests, and diseases unless you are an experienced grower. However, you have to inspect the clones before adding them to your garden thoroughly.

Here are four things to look for:

1 – Disease

There are a few visual clues that help you identify possible diseases. For instance, a discolored plant with limp leaves is unhealthy. Although plants often give off a mild yellow hue when rooting, be wary of any other odd-looking colors. Powdery mildew is a visible sign of disease, and mold spores will often transfer to the surface of your clones. White powder on the tops of stem leaves is the vital sign to watch out for.

2 – Pests

In some cases, you may get lucky and see larger species, such as spider mites, on the plant. However, pests come in all shapes and sizes, so we recommend a careful search under every single leaf. It is also a good idea to check your soil medium, as pests can be attached. Pests often have specific ‘signs’ to look for. For example, spider mites are known to leave bite marks on leaves.

3 – Stem Width

If the stem is thin and narrow, the cutting likely came from a weak branch. Such cuttings are more susceptible to disease, and the rooting process will take longer. A thick stem is usually the sign of a vigorous and healthy plant.

4 – Pesticides

As we mentioned above, knowing the origin of the clone is all-important. It can help reduce the likelihood of pesticide use because otherwise, it is tough to spot. Modern-day pesticides don’t leave a residue, and they can live within the plant for its entire life cycle. If you see any residue, ask your supplier about it and find out more about how they manage pests in-house.

Clean & Quarantine Fresh Clones

Even if the clones pass all your tests, don’t assume that they are clean. There is a possibility you could have missed something, so you have to clean and possibly quarantine the plants first. The first step is to transplant the cuttings into suitably sized containers. Remember, the growing medium you use will probably be different from what the store used. It is also possible that the existing medium contains pests. Therefore, transplantation to a cleaner location could prevent root damage.

At this point, it is up to you to decide how you want to treat your cuttings to protect them against pests. Most growers dip their plants into organic pesticides before transplanting them into the new medium. We recommend keeping them quarantined for around a week to maintain the safety of the rest of your garden. If they develop any symptoms during this period, you can get rid of these plants before exposing other plants.

How to Raise a Mother Plant

The mother plant provides the clippings to create clones. It grows in a continuous vegetative stage as you are continually clipping clones from it. The cloning process guarantees that all plants in the garden produce at the same rate. They should offer a similar-sized yield, taste the same, and should be equally potent. Such plants have the same vigor as the mother plant, which is why selecting the right one is so important.

Why Are Cannabis Mother Plants Important?

The most important thing about mother plants is the consistency they provide. If you’re a commercial grower, your customers expect the same quality every time, something that you do get with cloning. The trouble with growing from seeds is that you have to deal with varying nutrient needs and differences in growth patterns. The result is a variance in quality and potency from one crop to another.

Here are three compelling reasons to grow a mother plant:

1 – Cost

Quality cannabis seeds are expensive, up to $10 each. If you are cultivating weed for seed production, it becomes less of a burden. Otherwise, you have to pay serious money for new seeds for every growth. Buying individual clones is pricey as well. However, if you germinate handfuls of the same seeds and use a mother plant, you can produce dozens of clones at no extra cost.

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2 – Speed

Clones speed up the beginning of the growing process. You don’t have to wait for seeds to germinate, so the first few weeks are very productive.

3 – Quality

Seeds from the same strain have different phenotypes. When you uncover a strain with a fantastic phenotype, a mother plant helps you repeat these qualities. This is possible with every crop, as you can create genetically identical offspring.

How to Select a Cannabis Mother Plant from Seeds

Choosing a mother plant can be difficult because marijuana plants often express multiple phenotypes. However, you should have success by following these steps.

Once you receive your latest batch of seeds, start the growing process as usual. Once the plants are growing well, start taking cuttings during the third week of vegetative growth. Always take your cuttings before plants begin to flower. Remember, clones are the same biological age as their parents. So, if you take cuttings of a flowering plant, your clone will continue flowering despite its size.

Label the cuttings so you can distinguish between parent plants. Start flowering the donor plants via the usual 12/12 lighting cycle. Cuttings must remain on the vegetative light pattern. Then, wait until the plants show their gender and remove all males and their corresponding clones.

Specific marijuana strains are known for their lengthy flowering period. If you grow any of them, their clones will likely become unmanageably big and start flowering. In this case, take clones from these clones and bring these second-gen clones through the vegetative process instead.

It is during the flowering stage that you will determine the most impressive individual plants.

Six Categories to Consider When Choosing a Mother Plant

  1. .Strength: You need a healthy and robust mother plant that will provide numerous generations of vigorous clones. Check your plants to see which ones stand out. Remember, wide stems are a good sign of a worthy plant.
  2. Aroma: Unfortunately, you can’t taste your plants yet, but the smell is an excellent indicator of the final product.
  3. Yield: Don’t fall into the trap of assuming that a significant return means a healthy crop and vice-versa. However, if you are obsessed with substantial yields, it is clear that this is an important area to focus on.
  4. Aesthetics: There are several attractive marijuana strains. If you choose one known for its good looks, you can determine if you want to clone more of them.
  5. Potency: Aroma is probably the best indicator of potency at this stage.
  6. Phenotypes: If you have conducted ample research, you will know the phenotype you seek. If you know that a marijuana strain has a tall and short phenotype, you will spot it early on.

Hopefully, you will be able to reject unsuitable clones before the end of flowering. You only know if you have made the right choice after the marijuana has been harvested, dried, cured, and sampled. Cloning is a numbers game; the more individuals you plant, the more likely you are to find a premium-quality mother.

A Seven-Step Overview of Selecting Your Mother Plant

  1. Germinate and grow as many seeds as you can to provide a high-quality sample.
  2. It is best to wait until the plants reveal their sex during vegetative growth. Remove males and take a few clones from each female plant.
  3. Allow the clones to reach the flowering stage and ensure the original plants remain in vegetative growth.
  4. If clones become too large to manage when the original plants are flowering, replace them with clones of themselves.
  5. When these new plants flower and are harvested, look for characteristics such as flavor, yield, aroma, growth pattern, and bud structure.
  6. After the original crop is dried and cured, choose the most desirable individual. Now, it is necessary to find the clone that is the closest match to this individual. Remove the other clones, although you have the option of flowering them anyway.
  7. Your chosen clone is the mother plant, which means you must not flower it.

Protecting Your Mother Plants

Your chosen mother plant is still in its early stages. So, if you took more than one generation of clones while waiting for flowering, don’t take any cuttings from her until she has had a minimum of three weeks of vegetation. If you need a high clone volume, take several clones from the mother plant. Then, grow them further to create several genetically identical mothers.

You can protect your mother plant by germinating and growing it in an organic base. This enables her to gain immunity against certain diseases rather than trying to protect her with non-organic nutrients and mediums.

Use the original plant from seed as the mother plant rather than choosing the very first clone she created. Plants grown from seed have deeper and stronger taproots, as well as better immune systems than clones. Later on, you are permitted to use specific nutrients for mother plants that provide robust clones. You can now keep them safe, even as clones are continually clipped.

The clones you use must be taken from mother plants with strong cell walls and a high level of carbohydrates. Too much nitrogen causes high-speed growth, which results in plants with low carbohydrate density and thin cell walls. Calcium-rich nutrients are a better option, as they aid with cell wall growth and carbohydrate density. The water stored by clones contains these carbohydrates and is used by the plant to produce roots.

How to Preserve Cannabis Mothers

It’s challenging to offer a longevity gauge, although we have heard of mother plants that still produce after 20 years! If you provide her with the right nutrients and lighting, she will undoubtedly last for years. As long as she is kept free from diseases and pests, that is.

Most growers prefer to change their mother plants every two years.

The reason for this is they tend to provide a smaller yield as time goes by. When this happens, keep one of her clones. Allow it to continue the vegetative stage until it can serve as a replacement. Again, the genetics are identical, so there is no need to worry about different flavors, growing techniques, or yield sizes. As for the mother plant, you can discard her or allow her to reach the flowering stage.

It probably seems as if the cloning process is complicated. However, in reality, it takes much less work than you might think. Once you have selected the right mother plant, creating clones is a relatively simple process. When you get it right, you end up with an almost limitless number of marijuana plants. This means one enormous yield each year.

Give it a try, and let us know how you get on!

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