cloning Cloning help needed

I have built a 5 gallon cloner with 8 two inch net pots with foam inserts, I have trimmed my overwintered Ghost pepper, trim the stem on a angle, put Clonex Gel on the stem, the water has a PH of 6.4 temps at night are 68 degrees and during  the day 73 degrees all the stems are getting misted, I added a 1/4 teaspoon of FloraMicro and 1/4 teaspoon of FloraBloom at the very beginning. My problem it's been 10 days and I have no roots, the plants looked like they started out strong, developed some new leaves at the nobs, now the leaves are stating to curl and no roots. This is my first attempt at cloning. What am I doing wrong?   
 
Jamison said:
Keep waiting man.  My last round of cuttings took over a month and a half to root.  
I was thinking of changing the water and adding the Floramicro and Florabloom this weekend what does everyone think?
 
Just wait. It will take a while. Remember they have been sleeping for most of the winter. I have had mine in my cloner one week, and am getting anxious too.
 
you shouldnt need any nutes .. i was told nutes can hinder root development since the plants wont need to reach out for them .
 
motocross308 said:
you shouldnt need any nutes .. i was told nutes can hinder root development since the plants wont need to reach out for them .
Thanks for the info, I'm going to change out my water with out the nutes and see what happens.
 
Well I changed out the water. The Water tested at 6.0 PH.     Drain off the old completely  and added a full gallon of new, now I just have to wait and see if roots will appear.
 
i have always preferred liquid rooting hormones to gels or powders. i use dip n grow currently- peppers are somewhat slow to root- generally takes 15-20 days. i'm rooting in a mix of 80% vermiculite to 20% potting mix.
 
biscgolf said:
i have always preferred liquid rooting hormones to gels or powders. i use dip n grow currently- peppers are somewhat slow to root- generally takes 15-20 days. i'm rooting in a mix of 80% vermiculite to 20% potting mix.
Thanks for sounding in and giving your opinion. When I started the cuttings I used Clonex Gel do you think it's worth using the Clonex solution it's $27.00 a quart at my hydro shop? I'm only going to be cloning maybe another 10 to 12 pepper plants then will be transferred to 5 gal pots and probably  the same amount of tomatoes.
 
 Thanks for the help Trickster
 
Trickster said:
Thanks for sounding in and giving your opinion. When I started the cuttings I used Clonex Gel do you think it's worth using the Clonex solution it's $27.00 a quart at my hydro shop? I'm only going to be cloning maybe another 10 to 12 pepper plants then will be transferred to 5 gal pots and probably  the same amount of tomatoes.
 
 Thanks for the help Trickster
for that number of cuttings i would stick to what you've already got. the tomatoes are going to root more easily than the peppers anyway.
 
 you can order dip n grow online for about 12 bucks as well. 
 
biscgolf said:
for that number of cuttings i would stick to what you've already got. the tomatoes are going to root more easily than the peppers anyway.
 
 you can order dip n grow online for about 12 bucks as well. 
Thanks again, This is my first year trying peppers, I have done tomatoes in soil and worked great.
I just my have to try to leave some peppers set up in hydroponics just to have more experience at that. 
 
Hey there, Trickster.
 
I would say you have a nice set up going. And I think you will have success shortly, it may just be taking a little bit to get started. Just remember that as long as the leaves are mostly healthy, then the cycle is still going and roots will happen.
 
For me, I have done well over a hundred clones of 3 or 4 different types of plants over the last year and so far I have only had 5 die on me. And now that I know what to NOT do for those situations (mostly laziness) I think I can prevent those 5% from dying too. There are a LOT of intricate things I do, such as: I do all of my final cutting under water to eliminate the possibility of a bubble in the stem, I use rock wool cubes in a humidity done that I control the temp and humidity to be what it needs to be at the current stage, I use a tooth pick to close the rockwool over the stem so no air gets in, I put gel on a tooth pick and use that to make the pilot hole and then dip the cutting in the gel to get a lot of it in there, I push the stems lower than I have before and get more root starts to grow, I use an inclining system of very light nutrients, and I prune each cutting accordingly to have just the right amount of green leaf as needed.
 
Those were just tips that I have grown to incorporate. I also have started using GH Rapid Rooter and so far am at 100% success. Every plant has lots of roots and new green growth is happening on all plants (for this round: 18 plants total).
 
Oh, I almost forgot... I keep my ph between 5.6 - 5.9 and have never had a problem with getting roots to start. --- I lost 3 plants in my life time to mold/fungis, which I have modified my air flow exposure to help and have a bottle of hydrogen peroxide at the ready to mix lightly with water in a spray bottle. I have also found that turning the plants regularly helps prevent mold/fungis, every added measure helps and it's good for the plants to get light exposure to all sides.
 
This round I also started using my pruning techniques which I usually reserve for when they go into the DWC or soil. I cut all big leaves off except the top one and as SOON as I see the new "branches" start growing true leaves, I prune that top "original" leaf leaving all of the plants root system to power each new branch.
 
 
Sorry that this doesn't perfectly relate to your aeroponic setup, but sometimes tips from one method could be used as an idea to help tweak other methods.
 
mrgrowguy said:
Hey there, Trickster.
 
I would say you have a nice set up going. And I think you will have success shortly, it may just be taking a little bit to get started. Just remember that as long as the leaves are mostly healthy, then the cycle is still going and roots will happen.
 
For me, I have done well over a hundred clones of 3 or 4 different types of plants over the last year and so far I have only had 5 die on me. And now that I know what to NOT do for those situations (mostly laziness) I think I can prevent those 5% from dying too. There are a LOT of intricate things I do, such as: I do all of my final cutting under water to eliminate the possibility of a bubble in the stem, I use rock wool cubes in a humidity done that I control the temp and humidity to be what it needs to be at the current stage, I use a tooth pick to close the rockwool over the stem so no air gets in, I put gel on a tooth pick and use that to make the pilot hole and then dip the cutting in the gel to get a lot of it in there, I push the stems lower than I have before and get more root starts to grow, I use an inclining system of very light nutrients, and I prune each cutting accordingly to have just the right amount of green leaf as needed.
 
Those were just tips that I have grown to incorporate. I also have started using GH Rapid Rooter and so far am at 100% success. Every plant has lots of roots and new green growth is happening on all plants (for this round: 18 plants total).
 
Oh, I almost forgot... I keep my ph between 5.6 - 5.9 and have never had a problem with getting roots to start. --- I lost 3 plants in my life time to mold/fungis, which I have modified my air flow exposure to help and have a bottle of hydrogen peroxide at the ready to mix lightly with water in a spray bottle. I have also found that turning the plants regularly helps prevent mold/fungis, every added measure helps and it's good for the plants to get light exposure to all sides.
 
This round I also started using my pruning techniques which I usually reserve for when they go into the DWC or soil. I cut all big leaves off except the top one and as SOON as I see the new "branches" start growing true leaves, I prune that top "original" leaf leaving all of the plants root system to power each new branch.
 
 
Sorry that this doesn't perfectly relate to your aeroponic setup, but sometimes tips from one method could be used as an idea to help tweak other methods.
Mrgrowguy,  Thanks you for your tips and I will apply them to my data base. I'll keep you informed and will be posting pictures very soon on my progress.
Jeff H said:
 
 
QFT. peppers can  take a while. 
 
Make sure you don't have bright lights on them. Without roots, they can't deal with a lot of light. 
Jeff, I have no lights on the plants just natural light form a window with some sun at times, in this snowy and cold state, that I live.
 
No need for nutes, you do not want top growth just roots. Clonex gel and Clonex liquid and they will root. Don't forget the air stone. And as stated above minimal light and no light directly above.
 
Back
Top