7 Tips to Keep Your Mother Plants Healthy

Mother plants are essential for maintaining a continual propagation system.  A strong mother plant is the first step to taking perfect cuttings.  Weak cuttings turn into slow and sometimes weak plants.  A weak clone is very susceptible to pest and disease problems.  The plant is already under going immense stress and an unnoticed infestation can kill it.  Here are 7 tips to keep your mother plants healthy and inevitably take stronger cuttings.

1. Trim off yellowing, brown, dried, wilted, and dead leaves – Dying leaves are a great place for bugs to hang out.  Your mother plant may be wasting energy trying to save dying leaves.  Cut your losses and focus the new growth.

Trim dying leaves as a method of pest and disease control
Cut leaves like the yellow ones off. The leaf that is mostly green and brown and the tip is worth keeping on the plant. Trim the brown part and the plant will still utilize the leaf for energy.

2. Use small amounts of nutrients – Salt lock up and over-fertilization are the last thing you want for your beautiful mother plant.

3. Try Mother Plant nutrient formula – I have personally not tried this bio-organic formula, but I have heard it works pretty well.  There seems to be a lot of buzz about it in the indoor gardening magazines.

4. Use a big container if you plan to take many clones from a large mother plant – Roots are a vital part of healthy vigorous growth.  A dense root zone will allow your mother to recover from cuttings quicker.  Bigger roots means bigger plants.

5. Water frequently – Use a drip system or hydroponic method to ensure your mother plant gets as much water as it needs.

6. Do not cut more than 20% of the healthy foliage at a time.  Taking too many cuttings at a time can stress your mother plant.  The plant should recover, but it may actually slow down growth because of the amount of energy it takes to recover.  The plant needs leaves to catch sunlight for photosynthesis.

7. Watch Closely for bugs and pests – Use a magnifying glass to check your plants!  You never know what you may find.  Any small pest infestation on your plant will transfer to your clones and potentially your whole cloning system.  If it makes to the next stage before you notice you may be dealing with a major infestation later on.  Preventative pest control is the best pest control.

BONUS TIP: Do not keep mother plants with a disease or genetic disorder.  It sounds prejudice, but they aren’t people.  Diseased mothers can pass the disease on to the clones.  The disease may not strike the plant until late in it’s lifetime.  By this time it is too late and you have already wasted your resources.  Not Hydroponic Economical… Keep the green thumbs up!

It Starts with Good Genetics

Have you ever started a batch of seeds and had a really top notch plant that just seemed better than the rest?  Have you ever been to a friend’s place and seen an interesting plant you would like to add to your collection?  It is actually relatively simple to do these things without going out and buying another version of the same plant.  When a cutting is taken from a ‘mother plant’ and dipped in rooting hormone, roots will form and it will become a new plant.  The new plant will be exactly like the old one in every way.  That is the reason you hear people talking about cloning plants.  There is no top secret cloning machine that pops out perfect plants ready to flower every time.  Although. . . that would be nice… but that takes the method out of proper clone taking practices.

If you get a seedling that is just plain better than the others or is one you would like to keep for your next crop, keep it around.  Once its established you can cuttings from strong stems to become healthy new plants.  There is sacrifice when you give up your best plant, but it more than pays its self back.  Your next harvest could be a set of clones from your strong mother plant.  That means every plant will be as strong as the strongest one on your second round and however long you keep the mother thriving.  You can take clones of clones for up to 20 generations.  There are limitless ways to keep genetics around.  Sometimes after so many cuttings are taken, the plant may become weaker and grow slower than it originally was.  That means its time to get out the seed starting kit and look for a new mother.