Regards, Scott
Some places need to be wild
Some places need to be wild
Creating edible biodiversity and embracing everlasting abundance.
Some places need to be wild
Regards, Scott
Some places need to be wild
Some places need to be wild
Regards, Scott
Some places need to be wild
Regards, Scott
Some places need to be wild
Some places need to be wild
Regards, Scott
Some places need to be wild
Regards, Scott
Some places need to be wild
Some places need to be wild
This is all just my opinion based on a flawed memory
You can only be young once … but you can be immature forever!
You can only be young once … but you can be immature forever!
Some places need to be wild
J Rowe wrote:Hi John,
With a few years of growing under your belt do you have any personal insight on your questions below, I have similar curiosity. Thanks!
I was wondering if someone would have certain experience with some of my questions:
1) can you endlessly regrow wine caps just by adding new wood chips every year? Or will the flushes diminish gradually to a point you need to buy fresh spawn? Has anyone kept their original spawn going for more than a few years?
2) Does anyone know the effect of wood ash on wine caps mycelium? I'm thinking of putting a thin layer of ash on the top of the beds gradually. Slugs love to dig in my wine cap/mulch beds and lay thousands of eggs. I found out some mushrooms flourish on ashes, but was wondering if someone had any experience with adding ashes to wine cap beds as a top layer.
Thanks in advance!
Some places need to be wild
Niko in Vancouver wrote:So I ended up on this thread looking to determine whether I can feed pine cones (not chips, just dried up cones from the ground) to my wine caps.
I think the general consensus is "probably"?
But I also found other interesting queries to which perhaps I can contribute my own observations & experience!
SLUGS: Yes, definitely a problem. But simple beer traps worked great to totally eliminate the problem. I got some cute green "pagoda" ones from Amazon too, so they look appropriately gnomish among the mushrooms :)
BEDS: I just form dedicated mushroom beds in the darkest corners of the ornamental garden, where nothing flowering and pretty really grows, simply by laying down logs (branches from trimming older trees, really) in a rectangle and filling it with leaves and debris. In most cases, the wine caps also seem to have spread beyond their beds, within a year or two.
SUBSTRATES: Pistachio shells worked really well. Walnut shells did not seem to bother them either. I have no straw, but I do end up with a lot of dried up scarlett runner bean husks every fall. The rest is leaves, twigs and sticks from pruning (after they've dried up) and, if I am lucky, mixed woodchips from landscapers working nearby (which I always end up "aging" /drying for a few months first, not sure why, it seems appropriate). It all goes in.
VIABILITY: With the above approach, the beds seem permanent to me. They come back year after year, two flushes, in May and October, since my original purchase (during Covid lockdowns). I just dump stuff on top, ad hoc. If it is too dry in the Spring, I may wet them a bit. That's all.
(*) I do get the distinct feeling that they do not like city water (chlorine?) but they, of course, love rain - even rain water from the rain barrel.
LATEST: I have an old bamboo planter, concrete, about 2'x8'. I killed the bamboo years ago (it was shooting runners over the planter, in to everywhere, even got into the house!) but now the planter is solid bamboo roots and cut stumps sticking up every square inch. I can't plant anything else in it and removing the bamboo tangle seems a herculean task, so I will lay chips and mycelium on top and hope that the winecaps will simply eat everything and in 4-5 years I will have a planter full of compost - and a dozen bonus wine cap harvests to boot!!
Cheers from Vancouver!
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Maybe he went home and went to bed. And took this tiny ad with him:
permaculture bootcamp - gardening gardeners; grow the food you eat and build your own home
https://permies.com/wiki/bootcamp
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