Kitten inspecting fuds, trim, leaf and stem from single plant 


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Kitten inspecting fuds, trim, leaf and stem from single plant



 

The buds are usually saved for smoking. The quality of the bud improves for several weeks after it has dried. The THC acid loses its water molecule and becomes psychoactive. Once the bud is fairly dry, the evaporation can be speeded up by keeping the bud in a warm place for a few hours or by using a microwave oven.

 

 

This flowering plant was regenerated into vegetative stage

 

Глава 31. Regeneration

 

After the marijuana plant has ripened and the flowers have reached full maturity, it still responds to changes in its environment. Plants can be regenerated and can yield a second, third and possibly even more harvests. In its natural environment, marijuana flowers in the fall, and then dies as the environment becomes inhospitable and the number of daylight hours decrease. However, if the day length increases, the plants soon begin to revert from flowering to vegetative growth. At first, the plant produces single-fingered leaves, then 3 and S fingered leaves. Within a few weeks the plants grow at the rapid vegetative rate. There are several advantages to regenerating marijuana plants rather than starting from seed. The plant has been harvested and its qualities and potency are known. The plant has already built its infrastructure. Its root system and main stem are already grown so that it takes less energy and time for the plant to produce new vegetative growth. A regenerated plant produces the same amount of vegetative growth in 45 days that takes a plant started from seed 75 days. To regenerate a plant, some leaves and bud material are left on the stem as the plant is harvested. The stem may be left at nearly its full length, or cut back to only a few inches from the ground. The more stem with leaf material left on the plant, the faster it regenerates, as new growth develops at the sites of the remaining leaf material. The plant started flowering in response to a change in the light cycle. To stop the flowering process, the light cycle is turned back to a long day period. The plant reacts as if it had lived through the winter and renews growth as if it were spring. Within 7–10 days new non-flowering growth is apparent. Marijuana seems to react fastest to the change in light cycle when the light is kept on continually during the changeover period. After it has indicated new growth, the light cycle may be adjusted to the normal garden lighting cycle.

 

Глава 32. Cloning

 

Clones are a fancy name for cuttings. Almost everyone has taken a piece of a plant and placed it in water until it grew roots. As it developed, the leaves, flowers, fruit and other characteristics of the plant were exactly the same as the donor plant from which it was taken. That cutting was an exact genetic reproduction of a donor plant. Many growers prefer to start their garden from clones. There are several reasons for this. Growers must start only a few more plants than needed because all the clones, being the same genetic make-up, are the same sex as the donor, presumably, female. Clone gardens are usually derived from donors which were exceptional plants. The new plants are every bit as exceptional as the donor. The plants have the same growth and flowering patterns, maturation time, nutrient requirements, taste and high. The garden has a uniformity that allows the grower to use the space most efficiently. Unique plants with rare genetic characteristics can be saved genetically intact. For example, a grower had an infertile female. Even though the plant was in the midst of a mixed field, it produced no seed. At the end of the season the plant was harvested and that rare quality died with the plant. Had the grower made cuttings, that plant's traits would have been preserved. Clone gardens have disadvantages, too. If a disease attacks a garden, all of the plants have the same susceptibility because they all have the same qualities of resistance. The home gardener may get tired of smoking the same stuff all of the time. In terms of genetics, the garden is stagnant; there is no sexual reproduction taking place. Cuttings root easiest when they are made while the plant is still in its vegetative growth stage. However, they can be taken even as the plant is being harvested. Some growers think that cuttings from the bottom of the plant, which gets less light, are better clone material, but cuttings from all parts of the plant can root. Cuttings are likely to have a high drop-off rate if they are not given a moist, warm environment. They often succumb to stem rot or dehydration. Stem rot is usually caused by a lack of oxygen. Dehydration results from improper irrigation techniques, letting the medium dry, or from overtaxing the new plants. Cuttings do not have the root system required to transpire large amounts of water needed under bright light conditions. Instead, they are placed in a moderately lit area where their resources are not stressed to the limit. Growers who are making only 1 or 2 cuttings usually take the new growth at the ends of the branches. These starts are 4–6 inches long. All of the large leaves are removed and vegetative growth is removed except for an inch of leaves and shoots at the end-tip. If large numbers of cuttings are being taken, a system using less donor-plant material is preferred.

 

Starts can be made from many of the internodes along the branch which have vegetative growth. These starts are at least an inch long and each one has some leaf material. If the cuttings are not started immediately, air may get trapped at the cut end, preventing the cutting from obtaining water. To prevent this, 1/6 inch is sliced off the end of the stem immediately before planting or setting to root. All cuts should be made with a sterile knife, scissors, or razor blade. Utensils can be sterilized using bleach, fire, or alcohol. Some horticulturists claim that scissors squeeze and injure remaining tissue, but this does not seem to affect survival rates. It usually takes between 10 and 20 days for cuttings to root. They root fastest and with least drop-off when the medium is kept at about 65 degrees. Small cuttings can be rooted in water by floating them. The ""Klone Kit", which is no longer available, used small styrofoam chips, which are sold as packing material, to hold the cuttings. Holes were placed in the chips with a pencil or other sharp instrument, and then the stem slipped through. The unit easily floats in the water. The kit also included rooting solution, 100 milliliter plastic cups (3 ounce), and coarse vermiculite. The cups were half filled with vermiculite and then the water-rooting solution was poured to the top of the cups. As the water level lowered, the cut-tings rooted in the vermiculite. Styrofoam chips can be floated in the water without solid medium. When the cuttings begin to root, they are moved to vermiculite. One grower adapted this technique using one-holed cork stoppers instead of styrofoam chips. He used 1 x 2 inch, 72-unit seed trays and placed one cork in each unit. The water is changed daily, or a small air pump can be used to supply air to the water, so that the submerged plant parts have access to oxygenated water. A water-soluble rooting agent containing B1 and the rooting hormone indolebutyric acid promote root growth. A very dilute nutrient solution which is relatively high in P is added to the water once roots appear. When the cutting develops roots, it can be planted in a moist medium such as vermiculite and watered with a dilute nutrient solution for 10–15 days.

 

One popular commercial cloning kit consists of a tray which holds peat pellets in a miniature greenhouse. The cuttings are placed one to a peat pellet. Fairly small-to-large-size cuttings can be placed in these pellets.

 

Cuttings can be rooted in the same way as any other woody cutting. First, the branch is cut into two, including some foliage on the upper segment of the branch. Smaller cuttings can be made, but they are harder to manipulate. Then a diagonal cut is made at the bottom end of the shoot. The cutting is put into a unit of 1 x 2", 72-cup seed trays, 2" pot or 6 ounce styrofoam cup filled with fine vermiculite wetted to saturation with water containing a rooting solution such as Klone Concentrate.

 

To place the cutting in the medium without scraping off the fungicide, a thin pencil or other rod is pushed into the medium, creating a hole. The cutting is gently placed in the hole and the medium gently pressed down tightly around the stem so that there is moist contact.

 

Cuttings do best and have a much higher survival rate when they are rooted in a humid atmosphere. The tray or containers are covered with a clear plastic cover which keeps moisture high and allows the light in. The cuttings are kept warm and within a few weeks they develop into rootlings. One grower used a pyrex dish and cover to root her cuttings which were placed in 1½ inch square containers.

 

 



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