Difference between revisions of "Oyster Mushrooms"

From Ice Age Farmer Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 9: Line 9:
 
== Sourcing ==
 
== Sourcing ==
  
These dowels did work for me.  As mentioned in the videos (including [[IAF_Podcast_Episode_1|episde 1]]), I sterilized (boiled) straw before inoculating with the dowel spawn.
+
These dowels did work for me.  As mentioned in the videos (including [[IAF_Podcast_Episode_1|episode 1]]), I sterilized (boiled) straw before inoculating with the dowel spawn.
  
 
* These dowels are available here:  [http://amzn.to/2qt0hyu Oyster Mushroom Mycelium Plug Spawn - 100 Count]
 
* These dowels are available here:  [http://amzn.to/2qt0hyu Oyster Mushroom Mycelium Plug Spawn - 100 Count]

Revision as of 17:48, 19 September 2017

OysterFromStraw.jpg


Nutrition

Oyster mushrooms have some nutritious properties that are too numerous for me to reproduce here now. Vitamin D is among them, though. Mushrooms have been used throughout history as well for medicinal applications.

Sourcing

These dowels did work for me. As mentioned in the videos (including episode 1), I sterilized (boiled) straw before inoculating with the dowel spawn.

I've also heard from listeners that inoculating logs should give 3-4 years of fruiting mushrooms, yet often they'll get as many as 6 years of good production. So maybe that's a better way to go than boiling bags of straw...

Cycle

The cycle is LONG -- it can take 3-6-9 months after inoculating a medium depending on conditions before actually yielding fruit (mushrooms). Bear in mind then, that to keep a constant production of mushrooms -- if this is even feasible given that they will only fruit in certain temperatures! -- would require a significant investment into building up a pipeline for months, before collecting any yield.

Any feedback here?

This project took so long to complete, that my data is not flawless on timeline. Sorry for the sloppy write-up; hope to improve soon.

Here is a first video

And a second video

Months later (9/11/2017), I awoke to find that mushrooms had fruited out of one of the bags. Perhaps it is because it's finally getting cool at night? I cut open the other bags to try to encourage fruiting there too, as the mycelium has fully colonized the medium, but nothing much has happened.