I've always read that, when cloning, I should get the cuttings into water ASAP to prevent an air bubble getting into the stem and messing up the process somehow. So I've generally tried to follow this routine when I clone, but I always wonder if it really matters.
I cut three clones this morning- a Blueberry, a Pineapple Chunk, and a Girl Scouts Cookies cross. I purposely left them lying on a bench with their stem ends exposed for over ten minutes while I was busy doing other stuff. Then I dabbed on a little cloning gel, put them into wet rockwool cubes, and buried them in a tub of moist coco. I have several cuttings already in there from the last week, including duplicates of the ones I cut today. They are all labelled, along with the dates they were cut, so it should be easy to compare rooting times, in a sort of non-scientific way. So I'll let you folks know what happens.
This has become my latest favorite way of cloning since I 'invented' it a few months ago. The coco is wonderful stuff and stays a perfect moisture. All I do is -stick the cubes with cuttings in - about an inch under the surface of the coco, hang a cfl above them, and leave them. No dome, no misting, and no watering, for the duration.
I cut three clones this morning- a Blueberry, a Pineapple Chunk, and a Girl Scouts Cookies cross. I purposely left them lying on a bench with their stem ends exposed for over ten minutes while I was busy doing other stuff. Then I dabbed on a little cloning gel, put them into wet rockwool cubes, and buried them in a tub of moist coco. I have several cuttings already in there from the last week, including duplicates of the ones I cut today. They are all labelled, along with the dates they were cut, so it should be easy to compare rooting times, in a sort of non-scientific way. So I'll let you folks know what happens.
This has become my latest favorite way of cloning since I 'invented' it a few months ago. The coco is wonderful stuff and stays a perfect moisture. All I do is -stick the cubes with cuttings in - about an inch under the surface of the coco, hang a cfl above them, and leave them. No dome, no misting, and no watering, for the duration.