How To Grow Organic Plants Indoors With LED Lights - For Beginners And Advanced Gardeners- Advice From a Professional Grower by Ryan Crippen
Author:Ryan Crippen [Crippen, Ryan]
Language: eng
Format: epub, azw3, pdf
Publisher: Parallel Tree Books - Ryan Major Crippen
Published: 2015-03-12T22:00:00+00:00
So eventually after lots of failure I finally found a method that works every time!
The important thing is to get a certain feel for what clones want. They want a moist, not wet medium when using domes. Wet is alright as long as done hydroponically with tons of air content. They want 100 percent humidity in the air for the leaves. Unless you are cloning hydroponically. They have to be kept sterile with peroxide water. (At least 1 tablespoon of 3% peroxide to a gallon of water). Or you can you use beneficial worm tea to prevent bad bacteria and fungus from forming. Enzymes work pretty well too. Use the peroxide water for your medium or hydroponic water. Clones want to be warm at all times, not cool or hot. Constant temperature is important. Fluctuations of the environment will stress the clones and delay rooting. Use a precise digital thermostat controller to control your room’s temperature. Clones want certain nutrients also. They want Phosphorus, but very little Nitrogen. They want some Potassium, Calcium, Magnesium, Vitamins, Humus, Sugar, and Minerals. Only feed if they seem hungry looking (yellowing leaves.) Once again temperance and moderation are needed. They basically want to be pampered like a baby. Do this and you should have a near 100 percent success rate every time. Clones can be done in either a humidity dome or a hydroponic unit. Clone domes are cheap and affordable. They can produce a lot of clones per dome. You can use any medium of your choice. Anything from pure perlite, to clay pebbles, coco, peat moss, etc. You can use little plastic cups for each clone or use inserts that have a bunch of little sections for clones. You can use Rockwool, but some people compare it to asbestos. For domes keep the humidity at 100 percent on the inside and keep it that way for the first week. Then gradually open the air vents, just a hair at a time. Open them a little bit more every day from then on. You should see roots before you open the air vents and reduce the humidity from 100 percent.
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