HOW TO: EASILY GRAFT A MARIJUANA PLANT TUTORIAL Step By Step VIDEO + PICTURES

thump easy

Well-Known Member
what r the yields say i have a low producer n i bust out a health rooted fucken thiving monster n i graft a supper stoney cliping would my yield change?
 

Thedillestpickle

Well-Known Member
This is great, I just did a graft from a female plant onto a male rootzone of the same strain. What is the point? Now I have 1 clone that is aided by a 50 day old monster root system! I wasnt very sterile about how I did it.. didnt even wash my hands or razor, but who knows maybe I'll get lucky

Now I'm trying to think if it could be possible to graft a clone onto the rootzone of a harvested plant? after you harvest you normally throw away the old roots.. but if you were to graft a cutting onto those roots, might you not have a super clone that would grow much faster?

the trouble is the stems won't match up. Youll have a 1 inch wide base stem and have to find a way to attach your 1/8th inch cutting stem. Any ideas?

Check out my own experiment I just started this 24 hours ago and its working so far... https://www.rollitup.org/grow-journals/505496-female-spliced-male-experimental.html
 

smokey de bear

Active Member
Great video, you made it seem very easy and i shall deff be trying this later on with multiple strains, plus rep to you and keep up the good work!
 

hyphae

Member
(granted I have grafted, I am playing devils advocate)

All techniques in gardening can be useful in some way given your understanding of it and its applicability to what your doing when, etc. etc.

HOWEVER: When something is not a "new" technique discovered recently, and still remains uncommon, it raises question. Why might this technique not be a popular idea in cannabis cultivation even given the numbers limitations. Plant number limitations have been a consideration since the medical marijuana era and long before 1996...

I will let others speak first, however would like to point out a simple and obvious reason this lacks in applicability across the board. (each strain requires various nutrients essentially at different ratios and times etc. making no host plant perfect for hosting a multitude of varying strains)
Granted but you could make "bunkmates" out of strains with similar lineages assuming you were confident of the nutrient requirements with each...
 

Thedillestpickle

Well-Known Member
Granted but you could make "bunkmates" out of strains with similar lineages assuming you were confident of the nutrient requirements with each...
I have found that you can grow a plant within quite a large window of nutrient strength. So i would expect it not to be too much of an issue, especially for keeping a mother plant since your not too worried about making it grow fast
 

Uncultivated

Well-Known Member
So would this make it possible to keep reusing the same scrog canopy? That is, harvest the buds off it and graft new colas onto the canopy and flower again? It would be like a combination of a scrog and a sog.
 

ddimebag

Active Member
sativas have much larger root systems than indicas...if you were to grow a sativa, harvest it and graft an indica onto the stump, you could get massive yields from the indica because of the unnaturally large root system...
 
Top