Christopher G Williams wrote:Yeah that is black pin mold and likely will eventually ruin the whole bucket. If I could offer you some advice for your next try: cut up your straw. You want the substrate to be more consistent; there are tons of air gaps if you just take straw right from the bale and stuff it in the bucket. I used to run straw twice through a wood chipper and that rendered a very nice consistency. You could even use a push lawnmower; just run it over the straw a few times.
Without knowing your particulars; temps, spawn amounts, etc. I hesitate to say this; but generally if your bucket or bag is not fully colonized in 2 weeks it is already contaminated or will be soon.
Eric Hanson wrote:I am not certain what the black stuff is or what it is doing, but the rest of the fungus looks great. It looks like it has healthy, rapid growth and is apparently colonizing the straw well. With only 2 weeks in, I think you have some great progress. My suggestion is to just keep an eye on it and hopefully it will rapidly consume all that straw and then start producing actual mushrooms!
Eric
Nancy Reading wrote:Over several years I have planted various different Hawthornes that are supposed to have bigger fruit than our native Crataegus mongyna (common Hawthorne or Quickthorn). For the first time this year I have flowers on two of my trees (yay!): C. Arnoldiana and C. Shraderiana.
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I was expecting that they would flower at the same time as the local Hawthorne, but they only started to open as the common Haw was over. I'm now hoping that they are self fertile. Does anyone have any experience to share on this? If not, I'll let you know whether I get any fruit later in the year - my trees are too far apart to be likely to fertilise each other
Eric Hanson wrote:Hi Penny, Welcome to Permies!
From the look of things, I think that your oyster mushrooms are doing exactly what they are supposed to do--they are aggressively colonizing all that straw you have in the bucket. At this point you should not see any pins. I would expect the fungus to completely consume the straw before producing any pins. As it is, your project looks great!
Eric