Last year I was able to have a very successful grow that included 5 plants (that are normally called "regs" or "shwag") in the heat of the San Antonio summer (ie. 90 degrees or more for 8 hours a day). I have started a new grow this year but as I was setting everything up, a crazy idea poped into my head... can I transplant a weed plant into another plant? I have heard of it being done for plants that are going extinct. For example, say one breed of pine tree is dying for whatever reason, so people can take branches from those trees and literally transplant them into other trees. So I got to thinking, that could be very useful in this area. Think about it. If I could transplant a canibus plant into a fully grown oak tree, I would hardly have to worry about providing it with nutrients because that oak tree would support it. Does anyone know about this being done before or if it would work? Personally, if it did work I think I should get the nobel peace prize...
hahahahah. what you are describing is grafting one plant onto another. it only works for similar plants. for example you can graft one species of cannabis ontop another plant. but it would take a lot of work and care, not "just let the other plant do the work idea". and no an oak tree couldn't have cannabis graft onto it, that's just ridiculous
Damn. So there is not way to tap into another plant's roots or do anything of that nature, along those lines? (That is, of course excluding the idea of growing a canibus plant out of another canibus plant).
I've heard of that. The ancient Egyptians did something with that to manipulate the flavor of their alchohol. That would be weird to graft cannabis into a vine. I wonder how it would grow? Would you be able to do grafts with potenitial branches that would normally be used for cloning?
the clone would be a clone of what ever section i think. like it would be impossible to take a clone with the properties of both. this all sounds very experiemental and would be fun to do. hops work because they are part of the same family as cannabis.
If it's because they are the same family does that mean they can be grafted onto Trema - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia ? That could be amazing seeing as how the Trema is an evergreen.
If they are from same family you can graft, such as Hops.... but they do not produce buds, and other things, so when you graft these two things together they lose the cannabis characteristics we are looking for(BUD for example) and roots cant support cannabis very well... theres all sorts of BS issues with grafting.