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Growing Oyster mushrooms
I have some older oyster mushrooms that are a little too far gone to eat.
I'd like to cultivate them. When I did a google search on the topic, I either got instructions that were very complicated, or hits for people selling kits. I don't care about sure-fire methods, so having something complex is not worth it. I need something relatively simple that has a chance of working, as opposed to excellent chance of working. Any suggestions or URLs you could recommend? -- Warm Regards, Claire Petersky please substitute yahoo for mousepotato to reply Home of the meditative cyclist: http://home.earthlink.net/~cpetersky/Welcome.htm Personal page: http://www.geocities.com/cpetersky/ See the books I've set free at: http://bookcrossing.com/referral/Cpetersky |
In article . net,
"Claire Petersky" wrote: I have some older oyster mushrooms that are a little too far gone to eat. I'd like to cultivate them. When I did a google search on the topic, I either got instructions that were very complicated, or hits for people selling kits. I don't care about sure-fire methods, so having something complex is not worth it. I need something relatively simple that has a chance of working, as opposed to excellent chance of working. Any suggestions or URLs you could recommend? I'm surprised that google did not turn up our conversation here about the toilet roll method. ;-) Take two unbleached toilet paper rolls and seal each one in a plastic ziplock. Pour enough boiling water over each one to just get it nice and wet. Let cool, then puree the mushrooms in a sanitized food processor or blender, (I used bleach to clean mine) and stuff that into the holes of the toilet rolls. Keep sealed and in the dark for 6 weeks, then take them out into the light and punch some holes in the bags. I used a similar method to this, only I used an ice chest. I got one flush from that, but later lost my culture to the heat. I had them out in the greenhouse. This is better done indoors as they fruit best at between 70 and 80 degrees. Good luck and keep us posted! :-) K. -- Sprout the MungBean to reply "I don't like to commit myself about heaven and hell‹you see, I have friends in both places." --Mark Twain |
In article . net,
"Claire Petersky" wrote: I have some older oyster mushrooms that are a little too far gone to eat. I'd like to cultivate them. When I did a google search on the topic, I either got instructions that were very complicated, or hits for people selling kits. I don't care about sure-fire methods, so having something complex is not worth it. I need something relatively simple that has a chance of working, as opposed to excellent chance of working. Any suggestions or URLs you could recommend? I'm surprised that google did not turn up our conversation here about the toilet roll method. ;-) Take two unbleached toilet paper rolls and seal each one in a plastic ziplock. Pour enough boiling water over each one to just get it nice and wet. Let cool, then puree the mushrooms in a sanitized food processor or blender, (I used bleach to clean mine) and stuff that into the holes of the toilet rolls. Keep sealed and in the dark for 6 weeks, then take them out into the light and punch some holes in the bags. I used a similar method to this, only I used an ice chest. I got one flush from that, but later lost my culture to the heat. I had them out in the greenhouse. This is better done indoors as they fruit best at between 70 and 80 degrees. Good luck and keep us posted! :-) K. -- Sprout the MungBean to reply "I don't like to commit myself about heaven and hell‹you see, I have friends in both places." --Mark Twain |
In article ,
Mycos wrote: On Mon, 20 Sep 2004 11:59:38 -0500, Katra wrote: In article . net, "Claire Petersky" wrote: I have some older oyster mushrooms that are a little too far gone to eat. I'd like to cultivate them. When I did a google search on the topic, I either got instructions that were very complicated, or hits for people selling kits. I don't care about sure-fire methods, so having something complex is not worth it. I need something relatively simple that has a chance of working, as opposed to excellent chance of working. Any suggestions or URLs you could recommend? I'm surprised that google did not turn up our conversation here about the toilet roll method. ;-) Take two unbleached toilet paper rolls and seal each one in a plastic ziplock. Pour enough boiling water over each one to just get it nice and wet. Let cool, then puree the mushrooms in a sanitized food processor or blender, (I used bleach to clean mine) and stuff that into the holes of the toilet rolls. Keep sealed and in the dark for 6 weeks, then take them out into the light and punch some holes in the bags. I used a similar method to this, only I used an ice chest. I got one flush from that, but later lost my culture to the heat. I had them out in the greenhouse. This is better done indoors as they fruit best at between 70 and 80 degrees. Good luck and keep us posted! :-) K. I'd forgotten about that. Yeah, very cool. I wonder if anyone has tried this with other species? Gary Williams exract "APAP" to reply Well, with cardboard, a similar method is supposed to work with Wavy caps...... ;-) (P. cyanescens) K. -- Sprout the Mung Bean to reply... ,,Cat's Haven Hobby Farm,,Katraatcenturyteldotnet,, http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dl...user id=katra |
wrote on Monday 20 Sep 2004 5:59 pm:
In article . net, "Claire Petersky" wrote: I have some older oyster mushrooms that are a little too far gone to eat. I'd like to cultivate them. When I did a google search on the topic, I either got instructions that were very complicated, or hits for people selling kits. I don't care about sure-fire methods, so having something complex is not worth it. I need something relatively simple that has a chance of working, as opposed to excellent chance of working. Any suggestions or URLs you could recommend? I'm surprised that google did not turn up our conversation here about the toilet roll method. ;-) Take two unbleached toilet paper rolls and seal each one in a plastic ziplock. Pour enough boiling water over each one to just get it nice and wet. Let cool, then puree the mushrooms in a sanitized food processor or blender, (I used bleach to clean mine) and stuff that into the holes of the toilet rolls. Keep sealed and in the dark for 6 weeks, then take them out into the light and punch some holes in the bags. I used a similar method to this, only I used an ice chest. I got one flush from that, but later lost my culture to the heat. I had them out in the greenhouse. This is better done indoors as they fruit best at between 70 and 80 degrees. Warning:- Oyster mushrooms produce a vast quantity of spores. It is recommended that growing them is *not* done indoors as inhaling the spores could result in a nasty fungus infection in your lungs (even producing mushrooms there!?). Good luck and keep us posted! :-) K. -- Edwin Hutton (use edDOThuttonATlsaevaPOINTuklinuxSTOPnet for email) ....Grant we beseech Thee that, ... during our journeys through the Internet we will ... treat with charity and patience all those souls whom we encounter. Amen.From http://www.catholic.org/isidore |
wrote on Monday 20 Sep 2004 5:59 pm:
In article . net, "Claire Petersky" wrote: I have some older oyster mushrooms that are a little too far gone to eat. I'd like to cultivate them. When I did a google search on the topic, I either got instructions that were very complicated, or hits for people selling kits. I don't care about sure-fire methods, so having something complex is not worth it. I need something relatively simple that has a chance of working, as opposed to excellent chance of working. Any suggestions or URLs you could recommend? I'm surprised that google did not turn up our conversation here about the toilet roll method. ;-) Take two unbleached toilet paper rolls and seal each one in a plastic ziplock. Pour enough boiling water over each one to just get it nice and wet. Let cool, then puree the mushrooms in a sanitized food processor or blender, (I used bleach to clean mine) and stuff that into the holes of the toilet rolls. Keep sealed and in the dark for 6 weeks, then take them out into the light and punch some holes in the bags. I used a similar method to this, only I used an ice chest. I got one flush from that, but later lost my culture to the heat. I had them out in the greenhouse. This is better done indoors as they fruit best at between 70 and 80 degrees. Warning:- Oyster mushrooms produce a vast quantity of spores. It is recommended that growing them is *not* done indoors as inhaling the spores could result in a nasty fungus infection in your lungs (even producing mushrooms there!?). Good luck and keep us posted! :-) K. -- Edwin Hutton (use edDOThuttonATlsaevaPOINTuklinuxSTOPnet for email) ....Grant we beseech Thee that, ... during our journeys through the Internet we will ... treat with charity and patience all those souls whom we encounter. Amen.From http://www.catholic.org/isidore |
wrote on Monday 20 Sep 2004 5:59 pm:
In article . net, "Claire Petersky" wrote: I have some older oyster mushrooms that are a little too far gone to eat. I'd like to cultivate them. When I did a google search on the topic, I either got instructions that were very complicated, or hits for people selling kits. I don't care about sure-fire methods, so having something complex is not worth it. I need something relatively simple that has a chance of working, as opposed to excellent chance of working. Any suggestions or URLs you could recommend? I'm surprised that google did not turn up our conversation here about the toilet roll method. ;-) Take two unbleached toilet paper rolls and seal each one in a plastic ziplock. Pour enough boiling water over each one to just get it nice and wet. Let cool, then puree the mushrooms in a sanitized food processor or blender, (I used bleach to clean mine) and stuff that into the holes of the toilet rolls. Keep sealed and in the dark for 6 weeks, then take them out into the light and punch some holes in the bags. I used a similar method to this, only I used an ice chest. I got one flush from that, but later lost my culture to the heat. I had them out in the greenhouse. This is better done indoors as they fruit best at between 70 and 80 degrees. Warning:- Oyster mushrooms produce a vast quantity of spores. It is recommended that growing them is *not* done indoors as inhaling the spores could result in a nasty fungus infection in your lungs (even producing mushrooms there!?). Good luck and keep us posted! :-) K. -- Edwin Hutton (use edDOThuttonATlsaevaPOINTuklinuxSTOPnet for email) ....Grant we beseech Thee that, ... during our journeys through the Internet we will ... treat with charity and patience all those souls whom we encounter. Amen.From http://www.catholic.org/isidore |
you might check out an article in the most recent Mother Earth News. It's like
7 pages of info/sources on growing shrooms. Lots of info on oyster mushrooms, winecaps, and shitakes. |
On Mon, 20 Sep 2004 13:50:56 GMT, "Claire Petersky"
wrote: I have some older oyster mushrooms that are a little too far gone to eat. I'd like to cultivate them. When I did a google search on the topic, I either got instructions that were very complicated, or hits for people selling kits. I don't care about sure-fire methods, so having something complex is not worth it. I need something relatively simple that has a chance of working, as opposed to excellent chance of working. Any suggestions or URLs you could recommend? You can grow the dam' things on newspaper, or rather in newspaper- stuffed cardboard boxes . . . . Then IIRC you induce fruiting by tossing the boxes in water for a day or so, and allowing them to drain. They're (wonderfully) meaty, so I imagine the yield in terms of caps per pound of newspaper is probably pretty low. -- ..sigzip* |
On Mon, 20 Sep 2004 13:50:56 GMT, "Claire Petersky"
wrote: I have some older oyster mushrooms that are a little too far gone to eat. I'd like to cultivate them. When I did a google search on the topic, I either got instructions that were very complicated, or hits for people selling kits. I don't care about sure-fire methods, so having something complex is not worth it. I need something relatively simple that has a chance of working, as opposed to excellent chance of working. Any suggestions or URLs you could recommend? You can grow the dam' things on newspaper, or rather in newspaper- stuffed cardboard boxes . . . . Then IIRC you induce fruiting by tossing the boxes in water for a day or so, and allowing them to drain. They're (wonderfully) meaty, so I imagine the yield in terms of caps per pound of newspaper is probably pretty low. -- ..sigzip* |
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On Fri, 15 Oct 2004 15:11:45 GMT, Gary Woods
wrote: (mimus) wrote: You can grow the dam' things on newspaper, or rather in newspaper- stuffed cardboard boxes . . . . Then IIRC you induce fruiting by tossing the boxes in water for a day or so, and allowing them to drain. Can you point me at any links? I got some oyster mushrooms at a local (Hudson Valley, NY) garlic festival, and want very much to grow my own. I'll likely start with a kit from mushroompeople, but would like to do it "from scratch." Well, I lost my library in a housefire several years ago, and only replaced the basics (Orson K. Miller's _Mushrooms of North America_ and Paul Stamets' _The Psilocybe Mushrooms and Their Allies_), and I don't remember where the newspaper cultivation was described. There's a nice collection of messages by some highly respectable types (eg, Stamets) at http://www.ecosyn.us/ecocity/Ecosyn/...-mushrooms.txt The page refers to "www.mycoweb.com", but that URL is now been taken over by a Dutch IT company-- there is a "mykoweb", now, but that's North America West Coast oriented. There's also a fairly dense page at http://archives.thenook.org/tek/GGuide.html -- ..sigzip* |
On Fri, 15 Oct 2004 15:11:45 GMT, Gary Woods
wrote: (mimus) wrote: You can grow the dam' things on newspaper, or rather in newspaper- stuffed cardboard boxes . . . . Then IIRC you induce fruiting by tossing the boxes in water for a day or so, and allowing them to drain. Can you point me at any links? I got some oyster mushrooms at a local (Hudson Valley, NY) garlic festival, and want very much to grow my own. I'll likely start with a kit from mushroompeople, but would like to do it "from scratch." Well, I lost my library in a housefire several years ago, and only replaced the basics (Orson K. Miller's _Mushrooms of North America_ and Paul Stamets' _The Psilocybe Mushrooms and Their Allies_), and I don't remember where the newspaper cultivation was described. There's a nice collection of messages by some highly respectable types (eg, Stamets) at http://www.ecosyn.us/ecocity/Ecosyn/...-mushrooms.txt The page refers to "www.mycoweb.com", but that URL is now been taken over by a Dutch IT company-- there is a "mykoweb", now, but that's North America West Coast oriented. There's also a fairly dense page at http://archives.thenook.org/tek/GGuide.html -- ..sigzip* |
On Fri, 15 Oct 2004 10:28:50 -0500, Katra
wrote: In article , Gary Woods wrote: (mimus) wrote: You can grow the dam' things on newspaper, or rather in newspaper- stuffed cardboard boxes . . . . Then IIRC you induce fruiting by tossing the boxes in water for a day or so, and allowing them to drain. Can you point me at any links? I got some oyster mushrooms at a local (Hudson Valley, NY) garlic festival, and want very much to grow my own. I'll likely start with a kit from mushroompeople, but would like to do it "from scratch." Peace, Gary Woods AKA K2AHC- PGP key on request, or at home.earthlink.net/~garygarlic Zone 5/6 in upstate New York, 1420' elevation. NY WO G I'm starting mine using toilet paper rolls inside of an ice chest after eating the mushroom caps and grinding up the stems and bases in the food processor. :-) As soon as the paper is colinized, I will introduce hardwood chips and shavings and surround the paper rolls with that. I have mycelia starting from the ground tissue already. I did this this spring and got one flush before losing my cultures to the heat, so am re-starting. :-) About how big was this flush? in other words, did it look like a worthwhile initial yield? -- ..sigzip* |
In article ,
(mimus) wrote: On Fri, 15 Oct 2004 10:28:50 -0500, Katra wrote: In article , Gary Woods wrote: (mimus) wrote: You can grow the dam' things on newspaper, or rather in newspaper- stuffed cardboard boxes . . . . Then IIRC you induce fruiting by tossing the boxes in water for a day or so, and allowing them to drain. Can you point me at any links? I got some oyster mushrooms at a local (Hudson Valley, NY) garlic festival, and want very much to grow my own. I'll likely start with a kit from mushroompeople, but would like to do it "from scratch." Peace, Gary Woods AKA K2AHC- PGP key on request, or at home.earthlink.net/~garygarlic Zone 5/6 in upstate New York, 1420' elevation. NY WO G I'm starting mine using toilet paper rolls inside of an ice chest after eating the mushroom caps and grinding up the stems and bases in the food processor. :-) As soon as the paper is colinized, I will introduce hardwood chips and shavings and surround the paper rolls with that. I have mycelia starting from the ground tissue already. I did this this spring and got one flush before losing my cultures to the heat, so am re-starting. :-) About how big was this flush? in other words, did it look like a worthwhile initial yield? -- .sigzip* No... but it was my first try. ;-) I anticipate a better yield now that I finally got my hands on some decene hardwood shavings! At least they flushed, so the "science project" has some hope if I feed them right this time. I'll be sure to report in a couple of months once things get going better, if they do. If all else fails, go he http://www2.mailordercentral.com/fun...SSPO100&VARIAT ION=&AITEM=1&MITEM=1 Reasonable price for a good spawn start. If mine fails THIS time, I'll be getting one, but I think I've done enough research for it to work now... I hope anyway! k. -- Sprout the Mung Bean to reply... ,,Cat's Haven Hobby Farm,,Katraatcenturyteldotnet,, http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dl...user id=katra |
Katra wrote:
At least they flushed, so the "science project" has some hope if I feed them right this time. I realize that the hanging festoons of weird shrooms in the movie "Men With Brooms" were likely oysters. And that it's time to call my local power company and see when they're doing line maintenance. They're more that willing to dump truckloads of wood chips close to where they're working. I've used them for mulch in the past, but new horizons open... Cheers! Gary Woods AKA K2AHC- PGP key on request, or at home.earthlink.net/~garygarlic Zone 5/6 in upstate New York, 1420' elevation. NY WO G |
Katra wrote:
At least they flushed, so the "science project" has some hope if I feed them right this time. I realize that the hanging festoons of weird shrooms in the movie "Men With Brooms" were likely oysters. And that it's time to call my local power company and see when they're doing line maintenance. They're more that willing to dump truckloads of wood chips close to where they're working. I've used them for mulch in the past, but new horizons open... Cheers! Gary Woods AKA K2AHC- PGP key on request, or at home.earthlink.net/~garygarlic Zone 5/6 in upstate New York, 1420' elevation. NY WO G |
On Sat, 16 Oct 2004 15:23:42 GMT, Gary Woods
wrote: Katra wrote: At least they flushed, so the "science project" has some hope if I feed them right this time. I realize that the hanging festoons of weird shrooms in the movie "Men With Brooms" were likely oysters. And that it's time to call my local power company and see when they're doing line maintenance. They're more that willing to dump truckloads of wood chips close to where they're working. I've used them for mulch in the past, but new horizons open... Cheers! I suspect you're talking about tree- trimmings here, since I don't think anything'd do very well on used telephone or power poles or railroad ties but _Armillariella_. Or maybe a polypore of some kind or other. (I wonder if it would taste like creosote? or whether anyone allergic to creosote would notice?) -- ..sigzip* |
On Sat, 16 Oct 2004 15:23:42 GMT, Gary Woods
wrote: Katra wrote: At least they flushed, so the "science project" has some hope if I feed them right this time. I realize that the hanging festoons of weird shrooms in the movie "Men With Brooms" were likely oysters. And that it's time to call my local power company and see when they're doing line maintenance. They're more that willing to dump truckloads of wood chips close to where they're working. I've used them for mulch in the past, but new horizons open... Cheers! I suspect you're talking about tree- trimmings here, since I don't think anything'd do very well on used telephone or power poles or railroad ties but _Armillariella_. Or maybe a polypore of some kind or other. (I wonder if it would taste like creosote? or whether anyone allergic to creosote would notice?) -- ..sigzip* |
In article ,
Gary Woods wrote: Katra wrote: At least they flushed, so the "science project" has some hope if I feed them right this time. I realize that the hanging festoons of weird shrooms in the movie "Men With Brooms" were likely oysters. And that it's time to call my local power company and see when they're doing line maintenance. They're more that willing to dump truckloads of wood chips close to where they're working. I've used them for mulch in the past, but new horizons open... Cheers! Mmmm... perfect. ;-) I had to go out of my way to find clean hardwood shavings locally. lol Had two woodworkers willing to share as they did not want their stuff to end up in the landfill. They were environmentally motivated. Same here. ;-) I talked to one of them about growing the Oysters and gave him a bag of fresh mushrooms from Central Market in trade for the stuff, so _he_ kept a bag of shavings back so he can play with it as well! Gotta love it. Be sure to report your results! I want to "seed" some dead oak stumps with spawn once I can get it going again. K. -- Sprout the Mung Bean to reply... ,,Cat's Haven Hobby Farm,,Katraatcenturyteldotnet,, http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dl...user id=katra |
In article ,
Gary Woods wrote: Katra wrote: At least they flushed, so the "science project" has some hope if I feed them right this time. I realize that the hanging festoons of weird shrooms in the movie "Men With Brooms" were likely oysters. And that it's time to call my local power company and see when they're doing line maintenance. They're more that willing to dump truckloads of wood chips close to where they're working. I've used them for mulch in the past, but new horizons open... Cheers! Mmmm... perfect. ;-) I had to go out of my way to find clean hardwood shavings locally. lol Had two woodworkers willing to share as they did not want their stuff to end up in the landfill. They were environmentally motivated. Same here. ;-) I talked to one of them about growing the Oysters and gave him a bag of fresh mushrooms from Central Market in trade for the stuff, so _he_ kept a bag of shavings back so he can play with it as well! Gotta love it. Be sure to report your results! I want to "seed" some dead oak stumps with spawn once I can get it going again. K. -- Sprout the Mung Bean to reply... ,,Cat's Haven Hobby Farm,,Katraatcenturyteldotnet,, http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dl...user id=katra |
On Sat, 16 Oct 2004 12:57:43 -0500, Katra
wrote: In article , Gary Woods wrote: Katra wrote: At least they flushed, so the "science project" has some hope if I feed them right this time. I realize that the hanging festoons of weird shrooms in the movie "Men With Brooms" were likely oysters. And that it's time to call my local power company and see when they're doing line maintenance. They're more that willing to dump truckloads of wood chips close to where they're working. I've used them for mulch in the past, but new horizons open... Cheers! Mmmm... perfect. ;-) I had to go out of my way to find clean hardwood shavings locally. lol Had two woodworkers willing to share as they did not want their stuff to end up in the landfill. They were environmentally motivated. Same here. ;-) I talked to one of them about growing the Oysters and gave him a bag of fresh mushrooms from Central Market in trade for the stuff, so _he_ kept a bag of shavings back so he can play with it as well! Gotta love it. Be sure to report your results! I want to "seed" some dead oak stumps with spawn once I can get it going again. Gills from a specimen too weathered to collect work just fine. -- ..sigzip* |
On Sat, 16 Oct 2004 12:57:43 -0500, Katra
wrote: In article , Gary Woods wrote: Katra wrote: At least they flushed, so the "science project" has some hope if I feed them right this time. I realize that the hanging festoons of weird shrooms in the movie "Men With Brooms" were likely oysters. And that it's time to call my local power company and see when they're doing line maintenance. They're more that willing to dump truckloads of wood chips close to where they're working. I've used them for mulch in the past, but new horizons open... Cheers! Mmmm... perfect. ;-) I had to go out of my way to find clean hardwood shavings locally. lol Had two woodworkers willing to share as they did not want their stuff to end up in the landfill. They were environmentally motivated. Same here. ;-) I talked to one of them about growing the Oysters and gave him a bag of fresh mushrooms from Central Market in trade for the stuff, so _he_ kept a bag of shavings back so he can play with it as well! Gotta love it. Be sure to report your results! I want to "seed" some dead oak stumps with spawn once I can get it going again. Gills from a specimen too weathered to collect work just fine. -- ..sigzip* |
If you are going to inoculate stumps or logs, look for tulip poplar. In my
area it is the preferred substrate. Steve "Katra" wrote in message ... In article , Gary Woods wrote: Katra wrote: At least they flushed, so the "science project" has some hope if I feed them right this time. I realize that the hanging festoons of weird shrooms in the movie "Men With Brooms" were likely oysters. And that it's time to call my local power company and see when they're doing line maintenance. They're more that willing to dump truckloads of wood chips close to where they're working. I've used them for mulch in the past, but new horizons open... Cheers! Mmmm... perfect. ;-) I had to go out of my way to find clean hardwood shavings locally. lol Had two woodworkers willing to share as they did not want their stuff to end up in the landfill. They were environmentally motivated. Same here. ;-) I talked to one of them about growing the Oysters and gave him a bag of fresh mushrooms from Central Market in trade for the stuff, so _he_ kept a bag of shavings back so he can play with it as well! Gotta love it. Be sure to report your results! I want to "seed" some dead oak stumps with spawn once I can get it going again. K. -- Sprout the Mung Bean to reply... ,,Cat's Haven Hobby Farm,,Katraatcenturyteldotnet,, http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dl...user id=katra |
If you are going to inoculate stumps or logs, look for tulip poplar. In my
area it is the preferred substrate. Steve "Katra" wrote in message ... In article , Gary Woods wrote: Katra wrote: At least they flushed, so the "science project" has some hope if I feed them right this time. I realize that the hanging festoons of weird shrooms in the movie "Men With Brooms" were likely oysters. And that it's time to call my local power company and see when they're doing line maintenance. They're more that willing to dump truckloads of wood chips close to where they're working. I've used them for mulch in the past, but new horizons open... Cheers! Mmmm... perfect. ;-) I had to go out of my way to find clean hardwood shavings locally. lol Had two woodworkers willing to share as they did not want their stuff to end up in the landfill. They were environmentally motivated. Same here. ;-) I talked to one of them about growing the Oysters and gave him a bag of fresh mushrooms from Central Market in trade for the stuff, so _he_ kept a bag of shavings back so he can play with it as well! Gotta love it. Be sure to report your results! I want to "seed" some dead oak stumps with spawn once I can get it going again. K. -- Sprout the Mung Bean to reply... ,,Cat's Haven Hobby Farm,,Katraatcenturyteldotnet,, http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dl...user id=katra |
In article ,
(mimus) wrote: On Sat, 16 Oct 2004 12:57:43 -0500, Katra wrote: In article , Gary Woods wrote: Katra wrote: At least they flushed, so the "science project" has some hope if I feed them right this time. I realize that the hanging festoons of weird shrooms in the movie "Men With Brooms" were likely oysters. And that it's time to call my local power company and see when they're doing line maintenance. They're more that willing to dump truckloads of wood chips close to where they're working. I've used them for mulch in the past, but new horizons open... Cheers! Mmmm... perfect. ;-) I had to go out of my way to find clean hardwood shavings locally. lol Had two woodworkers willing to share as they did not want their stuff to end up in the landfill. They were environmentally motivated. Same here. ;-) I talked to one of them about growing the Oysters and gave him a bag of fresh mushrooms from Central Market in trade for the stuff, so _he_ kept a bag of shavings back so he can play with it as well! Gotta love it. Be sure to report your results! I want to "seed" some dead oak stumps with spawn once I can get it going again. Gills from a specimen too weathered to collect work just fine. -- .sigzip* I didn't use Gills, I ate the caps. I use the tissue from just the stems and bases. :-) Would I need to use Gills to "seed" logs? I thought I could use spawn/mycelia? K. -- Sprout the Mung Bean to reply... ,,Cat's Haven Hobby Farm,,Katraatcenturyteldotnet,, http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dl...user id=katra |
In article ,
(mimus) wrote: On Sat, 16 Oct 2004 12:57:43 -0500, Katra wrote: In article , Gary Woods wrote: Katra wrote: At least they flushed, so the "science project" has some hope if I feed them right this time. I realize that the hanging festoons of weird shrooms in the movie "Men With Brooms" were likely oysters. And that it's time to call my local power company and see when they're doing line maintenance. They're more that willing to dump truckloads of wood chips close to where they're working. I've used them for mulch in the past, but new horizons open... Cheers! Mmmm... perfect. ;-) I had to go out of my way to find clean hardwood shavings locally. lol Had two woodworkers willing to share as they did not want their stuff to end up in the landfill. They were environmentally motivated. Same here. ;-) I talked to one of them about growing the Oysters and gave him a bag of fresh mushrooms from Central Market in trade for the stuff, so _he_ kept a bag of shavings back so he can play with it as well! Gotta love it. Be sure to report your results! I want to "seed" some dead oak stumps with spawn once I can get it going again. Gills from a specimen too weathered to collect work just fine. -- .sigzip* I didn't use Gills, I ate the caps. I use the tissue from just the stems and bases. :-) Would I need to use Gills to "seed" logs? I thought I could use spawn/mycelia? K. -- Sprout the Mung Bean to reply... ,,Cat's Haven Hobby Farm,,Katraatcenturyteldotnet,, http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dl...user id=katra |
In article . net,
"STEPHEN PEEK" wrote: If you are going to inoculate stumps or logs, look for tulip poplar. In my area it is the preferred substrate. Steve Can you mail me some? ;-) Trees available in my area include Mesquite, Cedar, Privett ash, Post oak, Elm, and Hackberry. Which do you think would work best? K. |
In article . net,
"STEPHEN PEEK" wrote: If you are going to inoculate stumps or logs, look for tulip poplar. In my area it is the preferred substrate. Steve Can you mail me some? ;-) Trees available in my area include Mesquite, Cedar, Privett ash, Post oak, Elm, and Hackberry. Which do you think would work best? K. |
"Claire Petersky" wrote in message
ink.net... I have some older oyster mushrooms that are a little too far gone to eat. I'd like to cultivate them. When I did a google search on the topic, I either got instructions that were very complicated, or hits for people selling kits. I don't care about sure-fire methods, so having something complex is not worth it. I need something relatively simple that has a chance of working, as opposed to excellent chance of working. Any suggestions or URLs you could recommend? If you are still having trouble, email me. It ain't hard to do. |
"Claire Petersky" wrote in message
ink.net... I have some older oyster mushrooms that are a little too far gone to eat. I'd like to cultivate them. When I did a google search on the topic, I either got instructions that were very complicated, or hits for people selling kits. I don't care about sure-fire methods, so having something complex is not worth it. I need something relatively simple that has a chance of working, as opposed to excellent chance of working. Any suggestions or URLs you could recommend? If you are still having trouble, email me. It ain't hard to do. |
"Claire Petersky" wrote in message
ink.net... I have some older oyster mushrooms that are a little too far gone to eat. I'd like to cultivate them. When I did a google search on the topic, I either got instructions that were very complicated, or hits for people selling kits. I don't care about sure-fire methods, so having something complex is not worth it. I need something relatively simple that has a chance of working, as opposed to excellent chance of working. Any suggestions or URLs you could recommend? If you are still having trouble, email me. It ain't hard to do. |
In article . net,
"Charles Newton" wrote: "Claire Petersky" wrote in message ink.net... I have some older oyster mushrooms that are a little too far gone to eat. I'd like to cultivate them. When I did a google search on the topic, I either got instructions that were very complicated, or hits for people selling kits. I don't care about sure-fire methods, so having something complex is not worth it. I need something relatively simple that has a chance of working, as opposed to excellent chance of working. Any suggestions or URLs you could recommend? If you are still having trouble, email me. It ain't hard to do. Please post your method. :-) I'm currently trying paper culture, moving into hardwood shavings. using salvaged tissue from the "tough" parts of the mushrooms. Thanks!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Katra |
In article . net,
"Charles Newton" wrote: "Claire Petersky" wrote in message ink.net... I have some older oyster mushrooms that are a little too far gone to eat. I'd like to cultivate them. When I did a google search on the topic, I either got instructions that were very complicated, or hits for people selling kits. I don't care about sure-fire methods, so having something complex is not worth it. I need something relatively simple that has a chance of working, as opposed to excellent chance of working. Any suggestions or URLs you could recommend? If you are still having trouble, email me. It ain't hard to do. Please post your method. :-) I'm currently trying paper culture, moving into hardwood shavings. using salvaged tissue from the "tough" parts of the mushrooms. Thanks!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Katra |
In article . net,
"Charles Newton" wrote: "Claire Petersky" wrote in message ink.net... I have some older oyster mushrooms that are a little too far gone to eat. I'd like to cultivate them. When I did a google search on the topic, I either got instructions that were very complicated, or hits for people selling kits. I don't care about sure-fire methods, so having something complex is not worth it. I need something relatively simple that has a chance of working, as opposed to excellent chance of working. Any suggestions or URLs you could recommend? If you are still having trouble, email me. It ain't hard to do. Please post your method. :-) I'm currently trying paper culture, moving into hardwood shavings. using salvaged tissue from the "tough" parts of the mushrooms. Thanks!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Katra |
I'd try the elm, ash & oak.
Steve "Katra" wrote in message ... In article . net, "STEPHEN PEEK" wrote: If you are going to inoculate stumps or logs, look for tulip poplar. In my area it is the preferred substrate. Steve Can you mail me some? ;-) Trees available in my area include Mesquite, Cedar, Privett ash, Post oak, Elm, and Hackberry. Which do you think would work best? K. |
I'd try the elm, ash & oak.
Steve "Katra" wrote in message ... In article . net, "STEPHEN PEEK" wrote: If you are going to inoculate stumps or logs, look for tulip poplar. In my area it is the preferred substrate. Steve Can you mail me some? ;-) Trees available in my area include Mesquite, Cedar, Privett ash, Post oak, Elm, and Hackberry. Which do you think would work best? K. |
In article . net,
"STEPHEN PEEK" wrote: I'd try the elm, ash & oak. Steve The Oak and Ash are the most available... ;-) Oak sheds for me! lol K. |
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