Thatoneguyyouknow_
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@BB22Yeah the nlxm86 cloned so easily I cut the top off and got a second clone.
Fwiw I tend to strongly recommend using the beefiest cuttings you can to make clones. Especially if you plan on reclining the clones to keep them around and not making a clone mother plant.
You can successfully clone any material with a growth node on it and make a new plant. But if you use robust mature growth the genetics of the plant and your end result will drift over time a *lot* slower.
If you clone a clone a clone etc from smaller less developed growth sometimes a genetic becomes pretty useless after only a handful of generations.
I've cloned a clone a clone etc for as long as half a decade with no noticable genetic drift with big meaty cuts. I've had em go wonk on me after 3 generations with tiny undeveloped growth cuts.
Wonk can mean a drop off of resins/potency. A drop off in yield, changes in physical expression and structure, going super stretched and almost reveg looking and other undesirable happenings.
These plants are annuals, def keep clone generation counts as low as possible and keep your cuts as close to the main apex meristems as you can reasonably get away with
Take big meaty clones from the tops of your plants and you will prob be feeding most of them back into veg 2 weeks later.
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