The Mycology Society
The Mycology Society
  • Видео 8
  • Просмотров 44 518
Blue Oyster & Coral Tooth Mushrooms Growing Like Crazy!
Curious about mushroom cultivation? 🌱 In this video, we dive into an exciting update on my Blue Oyster and Coral Tooth mushrooms that are growing like crazy! These fascinating fungi have been fruiting for a week, and the results are astonishing. Join me as I share tips, tricks, and techniques for optimal mycelium growth and contamination prevention.
We'll explore the aggressive nature of Blue Oyster mushrooms, from rapid colonization to their stunning transformation from dark blue to gray. Plus, get an in-depth look at the unique Coral Tooth mushroom, which resembles Lion's Mane but with its own distinct characteristics.
Discover how to create a thriving environment for your mushrooms using...
Просмотров: 326

Видео

Perfect Jar Lids for MUSHROOM Cultivation Mastery 🍄
Просмотров 2,9 тыс.Месяц назад
Join our full Mushroom Cultivation course: buymeacoffee.com/theconsciouscultivator/e/271201 Join our Microdosing Mastery mini-course: buymeacoffee.com/theconsciouscultivator/e/272558 Join our growing community, The Master Cultivators: buymeacoffee.com/theconsciouscultivator/membership Unlock the secrets to the Perfect Jar Lids for Mushroom Cultivation 🍄! In this comprehensive tutorial, Tyler fr...
Essential Tools for Successful Mushroom Cultivation
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.Месяц назад
Learn how to cultivate mushrooms at home using different techniques and essential equipment. From choosing the right spawn to creating a still air box, this video covers all the necessary steps to successful mushroom cultivation. Stay tuned for expert tips on reducing contamination and expanding your mushroom crop. CHAPTERS TLDR: Affordable mushroom cultivation at home can be achieved with esse...
Why I Grow Lion's Mane Mushrooms This Way (EASY Method)
Просмотров 333Месяц назад
Learn my easy method for inoculating grain spawn so I can grow Lion's Mane mushrooms. Be sure to subscribe and follow along as I demonstrate the inoculation process, showcasing the benefits of liquid culture over spore syringes. Whether you're new to indoor mycology or a seasoned pro, this grow guide will help you master mushroom cultivation with easy-to-learn growing practices. Watch now to se...
The Fascinating Science Behind Mushroom Fairy Rings 🍄
Просмотров 5512 месяца назад
Check out this video to unravel the secrets of mushroom fairy rings and how they form in nature. Join us on a journey to understand the captivating science behind these whimsical circles of fungi and the folklore that surrounds them. Don't forget to subscribe so you stay updated on our upcoming mycology videos! Thanks so much for watching! Be sure to subscribe to our channel to stay updated on ...
Quick & Easy Spawn-to-Bulk Method | Mushroom Cultivation Guide
Просмотров 29 тыс.Год назад
In this short video, you will learn the process of spawning to bulk in mushroom cultivation. Watch as I spawn colonized popcorn grain to pasteurized coco coir. If you're new to mushroom cultivation or are looking to expand your knowledge, this video is for you. We'll start by going over what bulk spawning is and why it's important in mushroom cultivation. Then, we'll dive into the step-by-step ...
Easy Bucket Tek Method Revealed | Mushroom Cultivation Guide
Просмотров 8 тыс.Год назад
Unlock the secrets of mushroom cultivation with our detailed guide on the Spawn to Bulk phase using the Easy Bucket Tek Method! In this video, we'll walk you through every step of pasteurizing your bulk substrate with the bucket tek method, an essential process for preventing contamination and ensuring healthy mycelium growth. Whether you're growing medicinal or gourmet mushrooms, this method i...

Комментарии

  • @ClownWhisper
    @ClownWhisper 4 дня назад

    Like everyone says and everyone said since bucket tech was around at first 650 one block of Cococoir I always do a quarter cup calcium carbonate to bring the pH up the rest gypsum two quarts of vermiculite 4 quarts of water. The morning before I plan to make up the mixture I'll pour a little less than half a quart of water into the busted up substrate just break it up with my hands a little bit shake it around and the next morning it's fluffy and then I make the whole batch up with hot water with the boiling water and it's really freaking easy I mean it takes nothing this time the first time I'm putting some nutrient in the coco coir I'm putting some a very small amount of malt extract to see if it spreads faster I might get in contaminates doing that but I'm trying just a test I put maybe two tablespoons for a whole bucket tack just to give a little tiny bit of nutrients for it to spread faster remember the faster you get the mycelium spread faster mushrooms grow the less chance of contaminant so it might be a wash

  • @ClownWhisper
    @ClownWhisper 4 дня назад

    Why would you not add the amount of water you need at the beginning to reach field capacity and then just shake the bucket up and roll it around to mix it up when you're ready to make your bins up I don't get it because you're exposing it to contamination by squeezing it out as you're building I tip tilt the The bucket up into the bin and drag just enough out and mix it close the lid done very little exposure

  • @e.b.2987
    @e.b.2987 24 дня назад

    I think his recipe was 650g coir with 350g vermiculite and 50g gypsum. That would probably balance the water. You’re right: 650g is 650g

  • @ZombieSnax42069
    @ZombieSnax42069 29 дней назад

    Good tutorial : I'd like to add that if one has a little extra cash , the plastic lids last alot longer. The metal lids tend to rust after I poke a hole in them. I still use both and haven't seemed to have any issues with the rust hurting yet. P.s I am sincerely excited to see that your recovering well and back to doing what you love.

  • @noahreed2920
    @noahreed2920 Месяц назад

    Can I use polyfill instead of micropore tape?

  • @AllThatIKnowNow
    @AllThatIKnowNow Месяц назад

    It's approximately 2 & 1/4 quarts (2.1 litres) of hot water per 650 gram brick of coir.

    • @TheMycologySociety
      @TheMycologySociety Месяц назад

      I was just looking for this, thank you so much. You're a lifesaver! Thanks so much for watching and for taking time to write. Hope you have a good one.

  • @boomingtrendz22
    @boomingtrendz22 Месяц назад

    Less talking more hands on, you kept repeating yourself over and over again this is why I'm giving it a thumbs down.

    • @TheMycologySociety
      @TheMycologySociety Месяц назад

      That's fair feedback, thank you for your honesty. This is something I'm actively working on, so please know I take it to heart and will be applying it to future videos. Thank you again and hope you have a good one!

  • @WavyMyco
    @WavyMyco Месяц назад

    I’m still waiting on the 6qrt tub update smh

  • @ZombieSnax42069
    @ZombieSnax42069 Месяц назад

    Looking forward to the Lions mane tutorial: I tried growing cubes for addiction / selfish reasons. If I could learn Lions from someone who truly cares . You would help atleast 3 people in my direct life. I want to learn from someone who has a dog in this fight and not just fun. I've rewritten this message 5x. Nobody understood how important that fairy circle was in your yard. We do.

    • @TheMycologySociety
      @TheMycologySociety Месяц назад

      Thank you so much for the kind words and I would be more than happy to help. I actually have another channel with more tutorials on it called @time-for-rain. I'm working to dedicate more time here to this channel channel, focusing solely on mushrooms. Hearing your feedback really helps. Let me know what you'd like to see. Please keep it coming. Best of luck to you and your journey. If I can be of any help, please be sure to let me know. Have a great day!

  • @isaiahfulton
    @isaiahfulton Месяц назад

    Did you find the ratio?

    • @TheMycologySociety
      @TheMycologySociety 25 дней назад

      Yes! Some other viewers helped me out. It's about 5 quarts of water to 650 g of cocoa coir. Hope this helps!

  • @perplexingpebbles
    @perplexingpebbles Месяц назад

    Indeed keep with it brother 🤙

  • @ZombieSnax42069
    @ZombieSnax42069 2 месяца назад

    So cool, you'd think watching mycelium grow on a plate would take some of the magic away, but it added so much more to the beauty. 🍄❤

  • @ZombieSnax42069
    @ZombieSnax42069 2 месяца назад

    So awsome that they popped up in your front yard. Definitely a good sign. ❤ A legit fairy ring in the front yard. I love all the Woo woo stuff and thats a powerful one. Epic way to check in.🥰

  • @RandomGoon3.14
    @RandomGoon3.14 2 месяца назад

    Pretty cool, thx for sharing. What ever happened to the Quick & Easy spawn to bulk update video? Did you make any additional vids on that project? Or did I miss it? Either way thx for your efforts, peace ✌️

    • @TheMycologySociety
      @TheMycologySociety 2 месяца назад

      Hey, I'm not sure what happened to the video, it looks like it may have been removed for some reason. I'm doing a new grow series now and plan to post more videos in the coming weeks. Stay tuned! Thanks so much for watching and sharing, hope you're doing well and hope you have a great day!

    • @RandomGoon3.14
      @RandomGoon3.14 2 месяца назад

      Removed?! Lame! Looking forward to the next project. Thx for the vibes and take care

  • @speakeasy7192
    @speakeasy7192 2 месяца назад

    Use two buckets. Drill holes in the bottom of the one you're putting the coco coir in. Place a spacer in the bucket so the water can run through the first bucket and gather in the bottom of the second

    • @TheMycologySociety
      @TheMycologySociety 2 месяца назад

      This is awesome, I'm stealing this. Thanks for the idea and thanks for watching!

  • @PianoUniverse
    @PianoUniverse 3 месяца назад

    Philly's recipe is 650g coco, 2 qts (8cups) of vermiculite, 1 cup of gypsum and 4.5 qts (18 cups) water.

    • @chicofromph33nix64
      @chicofromph33nix64 Месяц назад

      💯💯 ive been using that recipe for over a year and havent had any issues

  • @Shainito
    @Shainito 3 месяца назад

    Hi! Any chance you can post the ratio of water to ground coco coir? I do not know the channel you are referring to in the video.

    • @raytry69
      @raytry69 3 месяца назад

      Philly Golden Teacher

    • @raytry69
      @raytry69 3 месяца назад

      ruclips.net/video/wzMRjEDMdfs/видео.html

    • @Shainito
      @Shainito 3 месяца назад

      @@raytry69 Thank you. I heard that at the beginning. of the video. At around 11:44 he apologizes for getting the ratios wrong and says "some have shared with me the right ratios on my other channel". It is that channel I was wondering about.

    • @raytry69
      @raytry69 3 месяца назад

      @@Shainito I see. Please let me know when you find out. Thanks. :)

    • @Shainito
      @Shainito 3 месяца назад

      @@raytry69 sure. I will be knocking up my own batch soon so I will let you know how that works out. cheers

  • @radagastjones9339
    @radagastjones9339 4 месяца назад

    The coir bricks may not be as convenient to use as the loose stuff, but I regularly use 650 gram bricks of coir with 4 cups of vermiculite (at least, it's easy just to eyeball it), and 3.5 to 4 quarts of very hot water. If the substrate (after soaking 4 to 5 hours) is still a bit wet, I just add a bit more vermiculite to get it to field capacity. It takes time, and a bit more work to ensure the coir is broken up and hydrated, but even with the added expense of vermiculite, I have found it to pretty much replicate sensei's bucket tek every time.

  • @indianheadjerry2622
    @indianheadjerry2622 5 месяцев назад

    Always add less water than needed. If you need more then you add more boiling water to keep pasteurizing. If you add too much water then have to add more coco you’ve dropped the temperature and therefore are just hydrating and not pasteurizing.

  • @timpage5021
    @timpage5021 5 месяцев назад

    650 grams of dry coir bricked is about 12 quarts of loose coco .

  • @davidblack5551
    @davidblack5551 6 месяцев назад

    5 quarts of water is just about perfect for 650 grams of coco ✌

  • @censoredeveryday3320
    @censoredeveryday3320 7 месяцев назад

    I bake my substrate in the oven at 140F for an additional 20 mintues. I live in a cold climate and the hot water is probably not pasteurizing much because the temp quickly drops inside the bucket.

    • @floorfungus4209
      @floorfungus4209 6 месяцев назад

      how do you do this, dump wet coir into ovens?

    • @censoredeveryday3320
      @censoredeveryday3320 6 месяцев назад

      @@floorfungus4209 Yeah just add the coir and water to a turkey bake pan. Mix it up. Then put it in the oven with aluminium foil on the top of it. Poke a few holes and insert a temperature guage.

  • @armadillo9961
    @armadillo9961 9 месяцев назад

    Theres always contamination the goal is to minimize it

  • @renasdupont2806
    @renasdupont2806 9 месяцев назад

    if the oryginal one was with gypsum you know why its soupy ;)

  • @leeadickes7235
    @leeadickes7235 10 месяцев назад

    Turkey bag and pressure cooker. Simple and easy

  • @TechGorilla1987
    @TechGorilla1987 10 месяцев назад

    Silk hose and a cheap sous vide heater from Ollies. You're welcome.

  • @Frost-n-Criss
    @Frost-n-Criss 11 месяцев назад

    You're missing the 8 cups of verm, I do 1300g coir, 16 cups verm and 2 cup gypsum and I have found about 5.25qts of water to be the sweet spot

    • @bakedcreations8985
      @bakedcreations8985 Месяц назад

      Isn't adding gypsum make it in to substrate instead of casing?

  • @infectedpuddle1638
    @infectedpuddle1638 Год назад

    You need Vermiculite!!!

    • @proxima6652
      @proxima6652 10 месяцев назад

      i mean its not necessary but it definitely helps, if u wanted to u can jus use coco coir

    • @bakedcreations8985
      @bakedcreations8985 Месяц назад

      And perlite

    • @shvkejunt
      @shvkejunt 9 дней назад

      it has asbestos it’s healthier like this🙄

  • @governor419
    @governor419 Год назад

    Suggestion for you. If you take accurate measurements of both your water and coco prior to the soak, then measure the amount of water you squeezed out to reach your ideal field capacity, you should be able to figure what your ideal no-squeeze water/coco ratio is. As long as you have the bucket lid on through the entire soak and no water is lost to evaporation, i think this should get you pretty close to dialed in. Hope this helps.

    • @proxima6652
      @proxima6652 10 месяцев назад

      i have a question, so if i kept my bucket of substrate in say like 65-70 degrees would it still be okay to jus use or does it need to warm up, also if water does evaporate is it okay to re pasteurize?

  • @TheCorso1981
    @TheCorso1981 Год назад

    Nice thanks for the vid, what are you usinsing the substrate for is it oister ?

  • @NGE57
    @NGE57 Год назад

    Most recipes I’ve seen that had that much water, also called for 500ish grams of vermiculite. That would probably correct the saturation issue.

  • @DVDproducedit
    @DVDproducedit Год назад

    Would love to know if you found out what the correct amount of water is to add. Let me know!

  • @TheMycologySociety
    @TheMycologySociety Год назад

    Learn the next step in the mushroom cultivation process here: ruclips.net/video/O9X0LuedLyE/видео.html

    • @Shainito
      @Shainito 3 месяца назад

      Hi! At around 11:44 you apologize for getting the ratios wrong and say "some have shared with me the right ratios on my other channel". Any chance you can post the correct ratio of water to ground coco coir?

    • @Shainito
      @Shainito 2 месяца назад

      ruclips.net/video/hIzpTUXW86s/видео.html Substrate ratio: coco coir (125 grams, if dry brick; 190 grams, if loose), vermiculite (50 grams), gypsum (5 grams), and boiling water (3 1/2 cups, if brick coir; 2 1/2 cups, if loose coir).