All I HAVE
The truth, the reason and understanding
I'm looking to take cuttings between 8-10 inches with several nodes present.
I'll turn 1 Bangi Haze plant into multiple plants, keep 1 as my mother , then flower the other .
I took about 15 clones. TENT A is started for the next round.
Many new growers are at first unaware of the need to separate plants during different stages of growth—I know I was. When I started growing indoors, I approached the process just like I approached outdoor gardening. I assumed annual plants would simply go through their life cycles if I gave them some soil, water and light.
Although this is true, I quickly discovered that the most successful indoor growers take full advantage of the heightened control they have over the growing environment to maintain a perpetual garden.
To put it a different way, many growers establish separate areas to meet the needs of their plants during the three major stages of plant growth for annuals: the seedling and cloning stage, the vegetative stage and the flowering stage.
By continually growing plants in each stage, a grower is constantly cycling seedlings or clones into the vegetative stage, moving vegetative plants into the flowering stage, and harvesting flowering plants once they mature.
Understanding the required areas and the timing for each stage are the two biggest things a grower needs to master in terms of maintaining a three-stage, perpetual indoor garden.
Seedlings and Clones
The seedling and clone cycle is the start of an annual plant’s journey. Although it requires the least amount of space, it is the hardest stage to master because the atmospheric conditions within this area must be controlled and kept consistent.
New growers should seriously consider some sort of environmental control for the seedling area. At this stage, most plants prefer warm temperatures (75-85°F) and high humidity (60-100%).
Clones taken from a mother plant take about two weeks to develop roots. Using this time frame, you can calculate when clones need to be taken so as not to interrupt the flow of the perpetual garden.
I'll turn 1 Bangi Haze plant into multiple plants, keep 1 as my mother , then flower the other .
I took about 15 clones. TENT A is started for the next round.



Many new growers are at first unaware of the need to separate plants during different stages of growth—I know I was. When I started growing indoors, I approached the process just like I approached outdoor gardening. I assumed annual plants would simply go through their life cycles if I gave them some soil, water and light.
Although this is true, I quickly discovered that the most successful indoor growers take full advantage of the heightened control they have over the growing environment to maintain a perpetual garden.
To put it a different way, many growers establish separate areas to meet the needs of their plants during the three major stages of plant growth for annuals: the seedling and cloning stage, the vegetative stage and the flowering stage.
By continually growing plants in each stage, a grower is constantly cycling seedlings or clones into the vegetative stage, moving vegetative plants into the flowering stage, and harvesting flowering plants once they mature.
Understanding the required areas and the timing for each stage are the two biggest things a grower needs to master in terms of maintaining a three-stage, perpetual indoor garden.
Seedlings and Clones
The seedling and clone cycle is the start of an annual plant’s journey. Although it requires the least amount of space, it is the hardest stage to master because the atmospheric conditions within this area must be controlled and kept consistent.
New growers should seriously consider some sort of environmental control for the seedling area. At this stage, most plants prefer warm temperatures (75-85°F) and high humidity (60-100%).
Clones taken from a mother plant take about two weeks to develop roots. Using this time frame, you can calculate when clones need to be taken so as not to interrupt the flow of the perpetual garden.
Last edited: