Why can't you clone Autoflowers?

SquishMitten

Active Member
Everyone says you can't, I just haven't seen any reasons why.

I also have not a whit as to what reason, if I had an assumption I'd say it but I don't.

And I'll +rep to whomever gives me THE answer.
 

bird mcbride

Well-Known Member
Because they've been genetically f*cked with by a mad scientist pothead.There are a few methods of readapting the plant. But it wouldn't be an auto any more. Me, I'd stick her in an op full of males.
 

tomahawk2406

Well-Known Member
you can clone autoflower...........whatever age the mother is, your clone will be. i guess the best time to get a clone an autoflower would be right before it shows sex, or right after. it won't be big, won't yield much at all, and will be tough to keep alive. its possible though
 

HomeGrown&Smoked

Active Member
Technically they can be cloned, but since the plants flowers because of its age and not the photoperiod this becomes counterproductive. So if you clone an autoflower what you get is a plant that is one branch short of a full harvest and one clone stunted so much what you will be lucky to get a bowl out of it.
 

Medi 1

Well-Known Member
a mother4...and how would he keep a mom of an auto. again you cant stop its flowerring responce. and why waste your time to begin with. its more likly to hermie as its trying to do to many things at once and would cause stress it dosnt need. makes it ewven a weeker weed than an auto already is.
 

KuLong

Well-Known Member
you can clone autoflower...........whatever age the mother is, your clone will be. i guess the best time to get a clone an autoflower would be right before it shows sex, or right after. it won't be big, won't yield much at all, and will be tough to keep alive. its possible though
I would like to see proof to this claim. You will not get anything from a clone from an autoflower. I have not seen one person that got a successful clone from an autoflwoer.

@OP
Autoflowers are bred to be a one shot kill. You cannot clone autoflowers because their genetics are based off age and not photoperiod. They are simply not biult (genetically) to produce clones.

However, you can breed them and get seeds. ;)
 

bird mcbride

Well-Known Member
Just like the guy that developed autoflowering plants beleived that if there is a will there's a way. I think if a person studied into this auto thing, mothering and cloning of it could be possible. I've never encountered an autoflowering potplant. Just wild flowers for me so far. Nothing seriously genetically altered like this auto flower thing..
 

SquishMitten

Active Member
if you took a clone from it early, wouldn't the clone just autoflower? then you could take a clone from that and so on..

granted whoever said that the original plants would be minus a shoot, is correct.
 

brandon.

Well-Known Member
Just like the guy that developed autoflowering plants beleived that if there is a will there's a way. I think if a person studied into this auto thing, mothering and cloning of it could be possible. I've never encountered an autoflowering potplant. Just wild flowers for me so far. Nothing seriously genetically altered like this auto flower thing..
It's not "seriously genetically altered", it's a strain crossed with a ruderalis strain. I believe the first was Mighty Mite. You can't mother an autoflower. It will flower no matter what. Give it 24/0 light and it will still flower. If joint doctor says you can't clone it, I believe him.
 

SquishMitten

Active Member
I would NOT mother the plant, I konw this wouldn't work. I would simply take a cutting from the plant early...

HomeGrown&Smoked's post made the most sense thus far.
 

NothinButTheBest

Active Member
I would NOT mother the plant, I konw this wouldn't work. I would simply take a cutting from the plant early...

HomeGrown&Smoked's post made the most sense thus far.
the week or 2 it takes to root is 2 weeks of growing that it has missed out on... it only vegs for like a weeks or 2 then flowers basically...
 

bird mcbride

Well-Known Member
All real potplants under the correct conditions run vinelike shoots away from the pothedge. I think this plant would probably get long and vine like if it were put under a very low spectrum light and almost total darkness.
 

HomeGrown&Smoked

Active Member
Once the seed pops, the clock is ticking. You see, autoflowers are from a mix of photoperiod cannabis and cannabis ruderalis. Cannabis ruderalis is native to Siberia. Since Siberia doesn't have a long growing season, a process of natural selection occurred when cannabis found its way there; indicas that flowered earlier survived better compared to sativas. Because of the harsh growing environment, bud size and thc content on the ruderalis dimished to the point that it no longer resembled it's indica cousins. Because of these adaptations the ruderalis developed an internal clock in its genetic structure- once the root comes out it has about 2-3 weeks of veg growth before it starts the flower cycle because the plant thinks it only has 7 weeks to insure the next generation. When indicas or sativas get crossed with ruderalis, the flavor, potency, and (relative) bud size of the indica/sativa get mixed with the internal clock of the ruderalis strain. The only reason ruderalis has this tendency is because of where it evolved, and it is that tendency that will keep cloning from being an effective means of continuing the strain. The only way to successfully do this with autoflowers is pollination, and then you start to get into genetics. Depending on how the strain you buy was developed this could be easy (if it is the 3rd generation of the strain) or difficult/long (if you are getting 1st gen seeds from a ruderalis-indica or sativa hybrid.
 
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