Freakin' hippies and Squares, since 1986
Christopher G Williams wrote:Good luck distributing them 'where they are desired'... Depending on how much you desire them you may want to think of innoculating with actual spawn. Spores are very unpredictable and(depending on the species and the substrate) I would suggest they are unlikely to pretty grow.
Not to rain on anyone's parade though, by all means try it out; you won't be losing anything but a bit of time. Just don't bet on huge harvests or anything...
Freakin' hippies and Squares, since 1986
drake schutt wrote: ... unless you have a Cat 100 clean room.
Freakin' hippies and Squares, since 1986
Landon Sunrich wrote:Cutting out the gills with a pen knife seems like less of a pain in the ass than spore printing on know varieties
I was talking about liquid culture, which may have been a little off topic. I am a mushroom farmer and I started out with that book, a still air box, a pressure cooker, a wing and a prayer.
Florian Kogseder wrote: Making liquid cultures is just as easy as making spawn jars, you just use a different growing medium. This year I got a success rate of over 98% (4 contaminations on 236 spawn jars) with just a pressure cooker for substrate sterilisation an a spraying bottle filled with water to make a cleanroom out of my bathroom.
John Elliott wrote:
Florian Kogseder wrote: Making liquid cultures is just as easy as making spawn jars, you just use a different growing medium. This year I got a success rate of over 98% (4 contaminations on 236 spawn jars) with just a pressure cooker for substrate sterilisation an a spraying bottle filled with water to make a cleanroom out of my bathroom.
More dedication to the art of mycoculture than I have!
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