No, these are not magic mushrooms! Now that that is out of the way....
I'm gonna try my hand at cultivating mushrooms. I really do enjoy them with dishes, they add a nice flavor to certain meals So far my favorite I've had were some morels that my grandfather found growing in a leaf pile at his house. Sliced em up, sauteed them in butter and garlic and had them with steak. Oh my god were they good! Now morels are VERY difficult to grow. As far as I'm aware there is no good indoor growing kit for them. They like hard wood and grass seed as their substrate and that's for inoculation. Even with an outdoor kit it can take 6 months to 2 years to see some morels from it! That is WAY too long. So I ordered myself a brown sonoma oyster mushroom log that is pre-inoculated so all I have to do is cut the bag, keep it moist, and reap the benefits! I plan on gathering spores from some caps when they've grown, seeing as $25 shipped for a kit that can yield 8-16oz of mushrooms cannot be justified in my book. That and I'm a DIY guy, if they can do it and sell it why can't I do it and keep it for myself? So I purchased some inoculation loops, 10cc syringes, 1.5" needles, fine vermiculite, 4 lbs of brown rice, and some pleutorus eryngii or otherwise known as, trumpet royale, mycelium to innoculate some grows with. I'll be getting into detail on that process when I start it. For now I'll stay with my purchased kit. Oyster mushrooms like hard wood (trees) but they can grow on paper, cardboard, and even coffee grounds! They're supposed to be quite easy to grow and I can understand why. My ramble is done for now... after I type everything out of order so it will probably be confusing.
Anyway......
That is the mushroom "log" (not a real mushroom log since it isn't a physical log cut from a tree that has been inoculated)
Just got it today and followed the instructions that came with it to get it started. I should be seeing some pins come up in 2-14 days \
I'll get some pics up as soon as something interesting happens to it
I'm gonna try my hand at cultivating mushrooms. I really do enjoy them with dishes, they add a nice flavor to certain meals So far my favorite I've had were some morels that my grandfather found growing in a leaf pile at his house. Sliced em up, sauteed them in butter and garlic and had them with steak. Oh my god were they good! Now morels are VERY difficult to grow. As far as I'm aware there is no good indoor growing kit for them. They like hard wood and grass seed as their substrate and that's for inoculation. Even with an outdoor kit it can take 6 months to 2 years to see some morels from it! That is WAY too long. So I ordered myself a brown sonoma oyster mushroom log that is pre-inoculated so all I have to do is cut the bag, keep it moist, and reap the benefits! I plan on gathering spores from some caps when they've grown, seeing as $25 shipped for a kit that can yield 8-16oz of mushrooms cannot be justified in my book. That and I'm a DIY guy, if they can do it and sell it why can't I do it and keep it for myself? So I purchased some inoculation loops, 10cc syringes, 1.5" needles, fine vermiculite, 4 lbs of brown rice, and some pleutorus eryngii or otherwise known as, trumpet royale, mycelium to innoculate some grows with. I'll be getting into detail on that process when I start it. For now I'll stay with my purchased kit. Oyster mushrooms like hard wood (trees) but they can grow on paper, cardboard, and even coffee grounds! They're supposed to be quite easy to grow and I can understand why. My ramble is done for now... after I type everything out of order so it will probably be confusing.
Anyway......
That is the mushroom "log" (not a real mushroom log since it isn't a physical log cut from a tree that has been inoculated)
Just got it today and followed the instructions that came with it to get it started. I should be seeing some pins come up in 2-14 days \
I'll get some pics up as soon as something interesting happens to it