1. White Shark
- She's all alone in the Mothership right now, but soon will have 2 new roommates! In preparation, I've moved her from the centre to a corner position in the box.
- Continuing to prune/train her into a bowl shape that allows lots of light/air penetration and also that allows her to provide ~24 cuttings at any given time to run a crop
2. SomangoXXL & 8 Ball Kush
- continuing to develop a "mainline" type structure.
- focusing on total plant shape/size and number of available cloning sites (need ~24 at a time)
- they are currently in 1 gal pots, but I will transplant to 2 gal in another 1-2 weeks, then move them into the Mothership with the White Shark mom.
> all plants continuing to love and thrive with their Blumats
> it's all INCREDIBLY convenient to use Mantis Buffered Nutrients because - regardless of plant stage - it's always 5 ml/L. So that means I can run all plants/Blumats off a single reservoir without being concerned about EC/TDS 😎
@Rangi_Kijani, you should look into Side Grafting it may be a better option to experiment with on weed plants. See a bit of info on internet doing it with tomato plants which have a similar stem structure.
@Philindicus,I think there was a mismatch of tissue between the scion and root stock. The scion was lush, green and juicy - allowing the grafting tool to make a clean cut. The root stock was hard (due to training) and did not have greener branches of a large enough diameter to graft into.
The tool also has 3 different blade designs and I opted to use the omega Ω style because it is said to give the most secure join. However, on the firm root stock I didn’t get a clean cut and did some crushing of the tissue. Next time I’ll try using a “simpler” blade. I also now have Parafilm to get a better wrap/seal around the graft site.
I’ll give it another go and post updates ... once the moms from
my new strains have developed enough I can also try using a different root stock to see if that produces any different results.
@Rangi_Kijani, that sucks bro but nice try. Were the stems solid or a bit hollow? May be they were to soft and not woody enough. You definately need a bit of light bark with a cambium layer. I'm sure you'll be trying again in the future. Back to the laboratory.
Well, first grafting effort was informative, but neither graft survived. Due to stem diameter, I didn’t get a clean cut with the grafting tool, so lining up the cambian tissue was difficult and obviously became problematic.
I May try again in a few days when I have some more donor stock developed from the XXL I have in hydro.
My intention was certainly to wrap the graft joint tightly to ensure cambian contact. However, my procedure was shaky (literally!) so I’m not confident that the graft is either properly aligned or secured. But, I know how I’ll do it differently next time! 😎
The challenge with this mom is that I’ve trained her back continually so she has a super sturdy “open bowl”-type framework. I’d like to graft into this if possible to keep everything low to start. I have <30” total height to play with. I also should have chosen a narrower blade (the tool came with 3) to make the cut. Lesson learned. If all else fails, I’ll graft into a new shoot, although that will be higher up.
@Philindicus, thanks very much! I’ve read a bit, watched some interesting videos etc ... so I have just enough knowledge to be dangerous! Lol Just going to have fun and see what more I can learn 😎