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Thursday, February 5, 2015

Cultivating mushrooms

Cultivating mushrooms can be very troublesome. Every species of mushroom has a certain climate they like so some mushrooms are considered almost impossible to cultivate indoors, while some are simply impossible. Some easy mushrooms to start cultivating  are oysters (Pleurotus ostreatus) by using colonized plugs in logs. Before getting into ways of cultivation, here are some crucial tools required for the process.
- Pressure cooker/canner
- Sterile inoculation box
- Flame or oil lamp
- Sterile environment clean as possible
- Sanitizing wipes
- Spore syringes
Some of these tools can cost a lot of money but make the process much more effective in the end. It's important to have a clean environment through every step to avoid contamination.
This means all counters and floors in the room you sterilize jars in the pressure cooker, and also inoculating jars. After letting jars cool in the cooker, you should immediately move them to your inoculation box. Sterilize your syringe or syringes by wiping the outside completely and also heating the tip until it gets red hot to kill any bacteria. After the whole syringe is sterile out it in with the jars and use your sterile gloves to inoculate your jars. Later you must place your jars in a dark area at a temperature appropriate to your species. Days later, you should see colonization and after 100% you must dunk in cool water and transfer to substrate of choice. This is when people use a myriad of ideas to make either bulk amounts, or do a small grow for lesser amounts but takes less space.

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Magic Mushroom habitat

There are a few distinct areas that are perfect mushroom habitats, that also goes the same with magic mushrooms as well. A few very notable areas for magic mushrooms include but not limited to; landscaped areas, clear cuts, riparian zones, farm land, dune grasses. Every single psilocybe mushroom has a different habitat except the woodlovers which can be found side-by-side. Before you head out in search of magic mushrooms, you should study what things to look for in a habitat. That way you don't waste time looking in every single area possible. You'll be able to dial in on mushroom hotspots over time and a quick glance could lead to your next jackpot. The very first area I went to was landscaped areas. Man-made destruction at its finest, everything changed to a cookie cutter image of what it "should" be like. Woodchip paved paths and salal recapturing logged areas are really good spots to check.

Lawn Mushrooms

Many people wonder what mushrooms are growing on their lawn. There are wide variety from fly agaric to panaeolus all the way to mycena. Sometimes mushrooms can be a landscapers nightmare as they seem to never go away. The best ways to get rid of mushrooms is not to just yank them all up, that will not do much since the mycelium is underground. But since the spores help reproduce, throwing the ones you find away may help. One thing i have noticed is, mushrooms do not reproduce well when the acidity of the soil is too high but still may return later in the year. Other ways that landscapers have resorted to includes fungicides, reducing humidity and digging areas up. This may be a bit extensive and the battle will seem like a loss. Sometimes mushrooms always win.

Mushrooms poisonous to dogs

Often times dog owners worry about mushrooms that their dog has eaten. Some mushrooms may be very serious, but most are no worries. If your dog has eaten a possibly poisonous mushroom, the best thing may be is to find where he/she ate it and collect a specimen. This will give veterinarians an idea of what it ate. You also can refer to mushroom forums with various features of such mushroom in hopes to get it identified, Although there are poisonous mushrooms in this world, usually dogs will not eat any mushrooms at all. Some dogs have been known to be bred for hunting mushrooms so they may as well be able to tell the difference between poisonous and edible with their super smelling senses.



Monday, February 2, 2015

5 Tips and secrets to mushroom hunting success

So since I've been talking about mushrooms and hunting so much, I may as well be helpful to the readers and give a few tips to help you when you do decide to take an adventure of your own. Some of these won't be as much of a secret to some people. But hey, knowledge is power.
1: Rain. You must wait for a few days of precipitation, you'll find much more because mushrooms are practically 90% water. Unlike plants, mushrooms don't need sunlight.
2: Disturbances. Not only the casual creek or river, but also includes logged roads and any man-made destruction. Fungi thrives in these areas because of the freshly available nutrients.
3: Trees: Many mushrooms are mycorhhizal meaning they grow from roots of trees. Study your tree types and it will help in the long run when looking for certain mushrooms.
4: Bike. Believe it or not, traveling short distance in hunting grounds allows covering larger amounts of area that you normally couldn't on foot. Sometimes you also miss smaller mushrooms though.
5: Elevation. Early in season if conditions are optimal, higher elevations will host climates suitable before normal picking times. This formula works the same way as late season when mushrooms can be found near sea level. Often people don't bother checking, but the early bird always gets the worm!

Mushroom identification

Mushroom identification to the average person seems difficult at first. But luckily, in this time we are in the the age of information and plenty of articles or books can be found. Some good websites for people starting out are mushroomobserver.org where people can vote on the species mushroom you've found. Also, shroomery.org message forums are a great place for help for much of anything concerning fungi. Other various forums work well too but sometimes it may take a bit of getting to know people before you get help. Books can be bought on Amazon or at local book stores. I've felt quite confident myself while using a field guide mushroom hunting. The descriptions of habitats helps quite a lot as well. Most books contain simple keys to identification, plus location of your discovered fungi helps zero down the possible choices. Still, some mushrooms require microscope work for further measurements in order to identify.

Sunday, February 1, 2015

Psilocybe cyanescens, a video

I found these all growing downhill and had to take a video. Don't forget to hit the like or subscribe button if you liked it. :)



These were found near the edge of a conifer line in an extremely public park. This season, the patch has been going since November and I've still been finding a few every week I go. Psilocybe mushrooms; especially cyanescens, really like public and lots of traffic. I've noticed with this patch in certain there was always deer poop and some of the woodchips moved away which makes me think either squirrels or deer are the reason they have spread to this location. Sometimes the busiest areas host them and nobody bothers, meanwhile others will rip them up at first glance.