Can You Reuse Mushroom Substrate?

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  • Опубликовано: 23 янв 2021
  • Can you reuse spent mushroom substrate to grow more mushrooms on? I've have read you can, especially between mushroom species. So I thought I would trial it between two mushrooms varieties within the same family. Doing so could increase mushroom farming yields against the substrate volume used.
    I used pink oyster mushroom substrate which has already grown around 1.5kg of mushrooms. I re-hydrated the substrate, sterilized it, inoculated it with Phoenix Oyster, and grew a bunch of mushrooms which weighted 650g.
    Starting out with around 1.9kg of dry matter, I grew MORE than 1.9kg of mushrooms, giving myself a estimated biological efficiency over 100%.
    This wasn't a scientific study by any stretch, and I am not claiming all substrate should be reused. The flush from this was small and of a lower quality. That being said, my humidifier had broken, and we were experiencing hot and dry weather.
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Комментарии • 219

  • @OakandSpore
    @OakandSpore  2 года назад +4

    Want to know how much income you can make farming mushrooms? Check it out here -> www.oakandspore.com/farmforprofit

  • @gardenlifelove9815
    @gardenlifelove9815 2 года назад +15

    Growing mushrooms is decomposing on large scale. You basically are making super compost each time you grow mushrooms. When you do the multiple grows using different species, then you're adding all kinds of good organic matter to the soil from the mushrooms as well as the wood fibers breaking down into cellulose and carbon. Awesome video and great educational content!

  • @bjoernsk85
    @bjoernsk85 3 года назад +113

    There's a bit about reusing spent blocks for Himematsutake on page 216, 3rd paragraph (3rd edition):
    "Agaricus blazei can be grown on the recycled sawdust blocks from the end of the cultivation cycles of Shiitake (Lentinula edodes), Maitake (Grifoloa frondosa), Reishi (Ganoderma lucidum), and other primary saprophytes. Turning the compost piles made from the above for several weeks and mixing with wheat straw has provided a satisfactory compost medium for growing Himematsutake. The net nitrogen of composted Shiitake blocks approaches 2%, near the target nitrogen levels for classic Portobello composts. The use of this mushroom on “spent” substrates from the cultivation of primary saprophytes is on-going for idealizing a sequence of mushroom species growing on the same medium."
    And I think the part you remember reading is on page 274, about 1/3 down the right side of the page:
    "The “spent” blocks can now be recycled by pulverizing them back into a sawdust-like form. The expired Shiitake substrate is then resterilized for the sequential cultivation of Oyster, Maitake, Zhu Ling, or Reishi mushrooms. "
    There's also a bit on the last part of page 337:
    "Spent Shiitake or Oyster production blocks (sawdust/chips/bran) can be resterilized for further reduction by Stropharia rugosoannulata"
    And then the main part of reusing spent blocks can be found in the beginning of chapter 22:
    "At our farm, I have found that the spent substrate generated in the course of Shiitake cultivation is in itself a valuable by-product. More mushrooms can be grown upon it! The mushroom cultivator can implement a circuit of recycling by sequencing species on the same substrate, resulting in the maximum yield of mushrooms imaginable. Each decomposer produces its own unique set of enzymes that can only partially break down a wood-based substrate. Once the life cycle of one mushroom has been completed, the life cycle of another species can begin on the same substrate utilizing its own unique set of enzymes, taking advantage of the remaining undecomposed wood fiber and the dead mycelium of the predecessor mushroom. After this second decomposer exploits the remaining lignin-cellulose to its fullest ability, a third species can be introduced. And so on.… I have been able to grow four species in sequence with this method. After several generations of mushroom species, the mass of final substrate is a mere fraction of the original formula."
    There's more on it in chapter 22, but I'm not going to copy the whole chapter here.
    Great video as always.

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад +16

      Awesome work Bjorn! These are the paragraphs I was after :) Thanks for taking the time to help out!

    • @bjoernsk85
      @bjoernsk85 3 года назад +13

      ​@@OakandSpore Having it as both a physical copy and a searchable pdf really helped :)

    • @vincecombla7628
      @vincecombla7628 3 года назад +2

      Noice

    • @Mimi_la_to
      @Mimi_la_to 3 года назад +1

      Thank you my guy 😌👌🏿🍄

    • @jonnyhatter35
      @jonnyhatter35 2 года назад

      let's say I get some spent lion's mane substrate, break it down, rehydrate it, re sterilize it, and re-inoculate it with, again, lion's mane spawn--would that work? or does it have to be a new species?

  • @AwninGod
    @AwninGod 3 года назад +24

    They turn the used substrate into compost here in Texas. Fruit trees love it (especially my avocados) A small cone shaped mushroom that grows in my planter boxes have a symbiotic relationship with my trees. Grew an avocado to 12' in a 24" diameter pot with a weeping bucket design.

  • @raduconstantin9015
    @raduconstantin9015 3 года назад +76

    If you want to be less wasteful, put your SMB (spent mushroom blocks) to work for you. A SMB should be minced up and put in a new bag with fresh substrate by a ratio of 30 SMB to : 70 fresh substrate( whatever you usually use, wood pellets, straw, sawdust, etc). The Ideal CN ratio, the carbon to nitrate ratio for Pleurotus type fungi varies from species to species, but in general the ideal CN ratio for the fastest colonization times made in a study shows that CN 35 ~ 40 is best. To clarify CN 35 means for every 1 nitrate there are 35 carbon and to find out the CN ratio of your substrate there are numerous charts online that show the exact CN for different substances. Best of luck with your farm.

    • @laquitafox7765
      @laquitafox7765 2 года назад

      How do you make substrate from pellets??

    • @jesuschristislordoflordsan427
      @jesuschristislordoflordsan427 2 года назад +1

      @@laquitafox7765 People also ask
      How do I make substrate?
      Combine vermiculite or sawdust, water and brown rice flour to make the substrate for your mushrooms. Hammer four holes through each jar lid. Mix the substrate thoroughly. Fill each jar with vermiculite mixture to the level of the lowest ring band.
      Growing Mushrooms at Home: The PF Tek Method - Mother Earth News

    • @jesuschristislordoflordsan427
      @jesuschristislordoflordsan427 2 года назад

      @@laquitafox7765
      Making Blocks with Fuel Pellets
      Gather the materials. ...
      Prepare the dry materials. ...
      Pasteurize the blocks. ...
      Cool the blocks. ...
      Inoculate the blocks. ...
      Incubate the blocks.

    • @sayuas4293
      @sayuas4293 Год назад +1

      He seemed to get a pretty good harvest out of 100% spent substrate though.

    • @TheCrabbers
      @TheCrabbers Год назад

      Very informative comment, Thank you.😊

  • @fishmut
    @fishmut Год назад +4

    Recycle ,recycle , recycle mate , well done , absolutely if you can reuse the blocks it makes sense to do that with a lot less waist and at the end when it’s no longer viable to use anymore you got a fantastic mushroom compost if you like to bag up and sell as well to gardeners , that’s what I would do if In Your situation or maybe even use for worm farms bedding ,I’m sure worms would love to convert it even more , so many thing it can still do , awesome video Bud . 👍

  • @premo154
    @premo154 3 года назад +10

    I love that you conduct impromptu experiments! That's what it's all about! I will absolutely give this a try in the future! Thanks!

  • @hoodyk7342
    @hoodyk7342 3 года назад +14

    6:56 😂 I love your genuine confusion and pause at your own words, Lol, you needed to take a second to think about what you even said. Been really enjoying the content 👍👍

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад +5

      Lol I was like WTF is a crafty craft-knife?

  • @tedward720
    @tedward720 Год назад +4

    Page 337 in the Growing Gourmet and Medicinal Mushrooms book. Going to attempt growing on spent blocks over the winter. Thanks for the videos and sharing so much information!

  • @jacobjamar
    @jacobjamar 3 года назад +1

    I really like your channel! I thought this was an old video. And I thought I'd already hit the bell... I was surprised that this came out yesterday. Was never notified, great video and keep up the great work!

  • @KaptainKirk265
    @KaptainKirk265 Год назад

    Great song choice at the end :) Thanks for the content!

  • @xxxggthyf
    @xxxggthyf 2 года назад +6

    Interesting. I've only very recently come to mushroom cultivation and I'm really impressed with it as a hobby. The main thing I've learned so far is that if you can accept a few failures pretty much everything is either dirt cheap, free in the sense that it's lying around the house anyway, reusable or lasts indefinitely.

  • @rreinierr4175
    @rreinierr4175 2 года назад +4

    As a fellow (oyster) mushroom grower and clinical researcher I have to say I love these video experiments!

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  2 года назад +3

      Thanks! mine clearly aren't quite research grade :D

  • @Calvin2030
    @Calvin2030 2 года назад +1

    Hey mate you have such a pleasant unselfish vibe. Thank you very much.

  • @pauloantunes8826
    @pauloantunes8826 3 года назад +4

    OMG I never consider this possibility... More research is needed!!!!!

  • @DabuDave
    @DabuDave Год назад

    I just saw this after 2 years of it being out. Such a good experiment thank you. Would love to see more of this

  • @jamesking-ve7lg
    @jamesking-ve7lg 3 года назад +1

    Great info, appreciate your work! Really interesting, was considering it myself

  • @Yoggoth
    @Yoggoth 9 месяцев назад +3

    Chapter 22 is what you need, but also page 22 saying
    "Species succession can be accomplished indoors. Here is one example. After Shiitake stops producing on logs or sawdust, the substrate can be broken apart, remoistened, resterilized, and reinoculated with another gourmet mushroom; in this case, I recommend Oyster mushrooms. Once the Oyster mushroom life cycle is completed, the substrate can be again sterilized, and inoculated with the next species. Shiitake, Oyster, King Stropharia, and finally Shaggy Manes can all be grown on the same substrate, increasingly reducing the substrate mass, without the addition of new materials. The majority of the substrate mass that does not evolve into gases, is regenerated into mushrooms. The con- version of substrate mass-to-mushroom mass is mind boggling. These concepts are further developed in Chapter 22."

  • @TheCooperville
    @TheCooperville 2 года назад

    Great video mate thoroughly enjoyed this one and actually all your other videos
    Subbed

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  2 года назад

      Thanks for the support mate!

  • @thefungiblemillennial-fina2207
    @thefungiblemillennial-fina2207 3 года назад

    Thanks for sharing this. I might have to try this sometime.

  • @marialuciano9756
    @marialuciano9756 4 месяца назад

    You are producing a very beautiful mushrooms! Great job man!

  • @laurafloyd5999
    @laurafloyd5999 3 года назад

    LOVE the experiment! Thank you for sharing!

  • @spamham897
    @spamham897 3 года назад +1

    Love the amount of prep he put into his video

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад +2

      Thanks! I try to make sure my videos contain useful information

  • @TylerHallHiveTech
    @TylerHallHiveTech 3 года назад

    Thanks for this! Will give it a go with my substrate as well. Very interesting. I’ll try snd find it in the book as well.

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад +1

      If you find it let me know!

  • @shitshowadventures4311
    @shitshowadventures4311 2 года назад

    Good to know! Thanks for sharing the success.

  • @nathanb3515
    @nathanb3515 3 года назад

    Just read that in the book as well. Really enjoying your content

  • @rayyanali4471
    @rayyanali4471 3 года назад +18

    Improve mushroom cultivation (as in the channel) covered a research paper where they used spent substrate with different percentages. The bag with 50% spent and 50% fresh substrate produced pretty good result though 60% fresh with 20% used and 20% supplements was better.

  • @ivandoychev8841
    @ivandoychev8841 2 года назад

    Thank you for the experience you share with us!
    The one and only craft knife brand fit to you is OLFA.

  • @andrefecteau
    @andrefecteau 3 года назад +5

    apparently you can grow micro greens and earth worms in spent substrate! then use what's left as plant fertilizer...cheers to you, good vid, I'd buy you a beer if I was there.

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад +1

      I do like a beer! Or 12.... yea I've thought about using worms to break down the spent substrate, will try this year I think.

  • @Yassous83
    @Yassous83 3 года назад

    Awesome video. Much appreciated 🙏

  • @TKeri-gt7rq
    @TKeri-gt7rq 3 года назад

    Thank you Sir! Greatly appreciated!

  • @free2cavalier
    @free2cavalier 3 года назад

    Boom! Im now a subscriber. Quality content.

  • @sayuas4293
    @sayuas4293 Год назад +5

    I am surprised you got such good harvests out of spent mushrooms, I wonder if it would be best to do it with different species since presumably different mushrooms use different nutrients from the block. For example first an oyster mushroom and then shiitake.

  • @jellyholler6197
    @jellyholler6197 3 года назад +2

    Thank you for your videos! I love the enthusiasm you bring! One thing I'm confused by though- I thought pine was a softwood, not hardwood. Everything I've read about growing gourmet mushrooms calls for growing on hardwood sawdust. What gives?

    • @alexsfamily4166
      @alexsfamily4166 3 года назад +1

      he pay way cheap the soft pine pellet, and the result is almost the same, look at if todays video he make just a experiment on this..

  • @arabsight
    @arabsight 3 года назад

    wow that's nice, thanks for sharing. We have a lot of Pinus halepensis in Algeria but I never tried it, now I will.

  • @AyuNoKo
    @AyuNoKo 2 года назад +2

    Interesting. I have always thought that big blocks seem like there must be many nutrients left in them. I wonder if non-oysters might grow well on spent oyster substrate. Shiitake? Beech mushrooms? I also wonder if you add some bran back in with the spent substrate things might perk up a bit.

  • @dertythegrower
    @dertythegrower 3 года назад

    Cool experiment
    Thanks for sharing

  • @npalaich
    @npalaich 3 года назад +3

    Great experiment! Thanks for sharing with us. I have some problem blue ouster bags that may have gotten too hot during incubation, fried a grow light, lost a humidifier during fruiting (damn you inkbird lol) and only have one bag pinning. May try this out with those bags

    • @alexsfamily4166
      @alexsfamily4166 3 года назад

      on inkbird you can set a way to not star if change the humidity a bit and also give a some minute for safte between evry start, can help to have long life span on the humidifier..

  • @romainarnoux
    @romainarnoux 3 года назад

    Keep going the good job. You rock

  • @jamesrapkins4935
    @jamesrapkins4935 3 года назад

    Nice one Tom! love your vids mate. great learning. PS: are they size 14A unicorn bags?

  • @peta661
    @peta661 3 года назад +1

    Might have to try this between Lions Mane and Oysters.... Hey, what do you call the hose attachment thing that sets the amount of water that you use in a single squirt?

  • @Catzillator
    @Catzillator 3 года назад +4

    before watch - I'd reuse it but I'll add some food into it first.
    after watch - yup definitely will reuse it.

  • @tdtrecordsmusic
    @tdtrecordsmusic 3 года назад +1

    Aim for a way to just hydrate while in the bag. Perhaps just setup 1/4 irrigation lines and make a custom 'needle' thing which U can sterilize and jab into the block whilst on the shelf. Oysters should shrink that block until it's the size of your fist. I personally see 1/4 the size of original block is normal, often goes to contam which I presume is due to out of balance nutrients. I base the hypothesis(out of nutrients) to what I observe of plants >> when a plant is new it grows and all looks fine. It might even go all the way to seed, but as we extend it's life farther and farther ... the symptoms of ' unbalanced nutrient profile ' start to show leaf color , taste , lame product and overall susceptibility to infection. Very nice looking oysters man !!

  • @TheRodNemisis
    @TheRodNemisis 2 года назад +1

    If you treat wood with steam it will change it's color, the longer you put it in the darker it gets,
    so it might just be a combination of both.

  • @GregPentecost
    @GregPentecost 2 года назад

    Any update on this video... have you started reintroducing your spent blocks or abandoned the idea?
    Brought this up on a couple conversation threads and everyone had unique ideas on it.

  • @MikeJones-mf2rt
    @MikeJones-mf2rt 2 года назад +1

    Pulverize spent media, add corn steep liquor, add amino acids/peptone, add yeast extract, add horse manure, add worms, compost for a few weeks, and then mix with fresh straw/sawdust to appropriate nutrient ratio for cultivar prior to pasteurization = Recycled Supermedia good for 6-8 strong flushes!

  • @TVGGAMEZCO
    @TVGGAMEZCO Год назад

    Question, can I use a piece of mycelium from a twice flushed substrate and put that into a monotube with fresh sterile substrate and will the mycelium start growing in that new environment? or does flushing destroy the myscelium ?

  • @btardedbot2.2.62
    @btardedbot2.2.62 2 года назад

    A genuinely good video

  • @elliottjames671
    @elliottjames671 6 месяцев назад +1

    Could you use the spent substrate to seed fresh unused substrate?

  • @wisconsinfarmer4742
    @wisconsinfarmer4742 4 месяца назад

    The second heating broke more cellulose chains that the first mycelium couldn't crack. For a real good bang add some wood ash to help the cellulosic cracking good time.
    Thanks for the experiment.

  • @sk8boy349877
    @sk8boy349877 2 года назад

    What kind of bags do you use for your fruiting blocks

  • @nguyentra3861
    @nguyentra3861 3 года назад

    Cảm ơn Anh đã chia sẻ kinh nghiệm trồng nấm nha
    Rất hay và ý nghĩa anh

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад

      Cảm ơn bạn đã ủng hộ tôi!

  • @linarator
    @linarator 3 года назад

    Hope your humidifier comes quickly. :]

  • @TVGGAMEZCO
    @TVGGAMEZCO Год назад

    i love this guy

  • @300jon
    @300jon 2 года назад

    How do you get another flush from straw sub strate?

  • @dawnmcmannis2551
    @dawnmcmannis2551 8 месяцев назад

    So I got the boxed starter kit oyster mushrooms and it tells you to lightly scrape the white off of the block under the X that I cut into the film me not never doing this before I think I scraped too much because now the mushrooms that are growing are only growing where the white was so did I do this wrong

  • @darkangelazure
    @darkangelazure 3 месяца назад

    What type of steriliser do you use?

  • @jackthemuss2493
    @jackthemuss2493 3 года назад +4

    So bummed out...
    I reuse my oyster hay substrate to re inoculate.
    I'm just a home grower but love the hydrated lime process

    • @NordeggSonya
      @NordeggSonya 3 года назад +1

      this is what I am going to try. Any tips?

  • @brastdoor1231
    @brastdoor1231 3 года назад

    Thanx for this great video. Now you have grown two from the same family ( ostreatus). Probably an other species even bring more, because of the nutrients in the block which didn’t where consumed by the oysters. Sorry for my bad English. Greetings from the Netherlands.

    • @free2cavalier
      @free2cavalier 3 года назад

      Je heb geweldig Engels! Im an American learning Dutch. Beautifull language. Doei!

    • @alexsfamily4166
      @alexsfamily4166 3 года назад +1

      @@free2cavalier Dutch is like a drunk German trying to speak English to a Frenchman
      IoI

  • @garethlfoster
    @garethlfoster 3 года назад

    Have you thought about using half fresh substrate and half used substrate? I plan to do some experimenting when my farm becomes commercial
    Great Videos too man

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад +2

      Yes I have, but it might take even more time trying to mix the bags up evenly and with speed. If things take to long it costs money...

  • @oOVanillaMelOo
    @oOVanillaMelOo 3 года назад

    That may seem like a stupid question but why can’t you reuse the already colonized blocks to grow more than two or three times? Is it that they will be missing nutrients? If so, is there a way to inject nutrients into the block so that you can keep using the same bags?

    • @rayyanali4471
      @rayyanali4471 3 года назад

      The sawdust will be digested and nutritional value will be less. But you can still mix it with fresh substrate and achieve good flushes.

  • @theUAPwhisperer
    @theUAPwhisperer 3 года назад +1

    Does sterilization heat 🔥 kill the mycelium? I thought we always have to pasturize the substrate before adding the mycelium.

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад +1

      You add the mycelium after you sterilize.

  • @StanWatt.
    @StanWatt. 3 года назад +3

    Interesting. I see no reason why you couldn't reuse growing medium over and over if you supplement nutrition too after three or four uses. Saves on costs too.

  • @georgefairweathermoonlight4
    @georgefairweathermoonlight4 3 года назад

    hi tom, fa some reason im not getting notified on your new vids, ive recliked the the bell?

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад

      Humm, I'm not honestly sure why that is! There might be a notification setting within your phone perhaps...

  • @learningtolivewithhumans1859
    @learningtolivewithhumans1859 3 года назад

    wicked video bro!! and it gose so dark because the wood breaks down and the sugars caramelised making it darker , you cooked it twice , just look at the colour contrasts from 1 , 2 and 3 ;)

  • @oomsoutie14
    @oomsoutie14 3 года назад +1

    Quick question...I've been told that pine wood is too soft to use as a base for substrate for growing exotic mushrooms, and that a harder type of wood needs to be used. Is that just not the case, or is the pine that you guys get over there a harder variant than the pine we get here in South Africa?
    Awesome video, by the way...reusing substrate wasn't something I'd ever even thought of before!

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад

      I use pine with great success! You can only try...

    • @oomsoutie14
      @oomsoutie14 3 года назад

      @@OakandSpore Awesome, I'll definitely try it out! Will be great if the ones here work, because they're super easy to get and really cheap, but finding hardwood sawdust/pellets/chips is like pulling bloody hens teeth!

  • @CampingforCool41
    @CampingforCool41 11 месяцев назад

    Can’t you use the spend blocks to colonize new substrate? Or does the mycelium all just die after fruiting, even when offered new substrate to expand to?

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  11 месяцев назад

      Its all contaminated. You need to use spawn thats sterilized.

  • @benjamindejonge3624
    @benjamindejonge3624 Год назад

    That is a good question, though is it worth, and what about the plastic waste

  • @itsmetolly8824
    @itsmetolly8824 3 года назад +1

    I wonder if you rehydrate after flushes how it would do. I usually get 4-6 flushes by doing that

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад +2

      I would think I would also get an extra flush, but there is a problem of bacteria building up.

  • @yousuckmorethanido
    @yousuckmorethanido 2 года назад

    what to do with all the plastic?

  • @jesse638
    @jesse638 Год назад

    Reckon you could use the twice spent bag once more? Interested to see how much nutrient recycling can be done before there’s nothing left

  • @jasonmillar2626
    @jasonmillar2626 Год назад

    this was super interesting, thank you

  • @naturesADHD
    @naturesADHD Год назад

    How about this experiment on straw cold lime pasteurisation?!

  • @burtenplays
    @burtenplays Год назад

    Well not all the nutrients from the substrate just went into mushrooms its in the mycelium in the entire block. Just looking at it from someone who is just starting but have looked into for years. Isn't all that dead colony after sterilization also now food/substrate and nutrients for the new colony. Obviously there will be diminishing returns, the nutrients are still moving out with the flushes but I dont think enough to call it spent when alot of it is still retained in the old colony. Happy I seen this, I wouldn't mind giving it a go as long as it produces. When it aint, its food for the veggies.

  • @Holypikemanz
    @Holypikemanz 3 года назад +1

    How to avoid mycelium not growing on the bottom of jars? Top reasons why mycelium wont grow on coir, gypsum, and verm bulk substrate?

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад

      Honestly, I don't do jars, so do not know.

  • @xj11w2c7
    @xj11w2c7 Год назад

    I wonder what would happen if you put spent mushroom blocks through a pellet mill.

  • @riverrat499
    @riverrat499 3 года назад

    Is your humidifier set on another country’s energy settings?

  • @yddishmcsquidish3904
    @yddishmcsquidish3904 3 года назад

    I've seen a before where instead of a hole, they just let the whole brick out the bag. Seemed to double initially fruit amount.

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад

      Too many small pins, it gives you a decreased yeild on the species i grow.

  • @charliefehr1152
    @charliefehr1152 2 года назад

    I think it’s chapter 27 or something, it’s right after he talks about indoor morel cultivation techniques. It’s only like one or two pages.

  • @jackychaiAG
    @jackychaiAG 3 года назад

    for your ultrasonic mister how often was it turned on? can you run it continuously?

  • @marksabota4056
    @marksabota4056 10 месяцев назад

    Do you have a video how do you sterilize the bag? What is the process and details? Don't you get mushroom mites after reusing a few times?

    • @Yoggoth
      @Yoggoth 9 месяцев назад

      Mites can not survive sterilization.

  • @souhaib7923
    @souhaib7923 Год назад

    How much is the mist device

  • @amberwright-smith8281
    @amberwright-smith8281 2 года назад

    what song was that?

  • @eliongerguri
    @eliongerguri 2 года назад

    Can you use spent mushroom substrate as a heating option in fireplaces?

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  2 года назад

      No, mycelium doesn't burn that well

  • @CasperLabuschagne
    @CasperLabuschagne 2 года назад

    1 kg of water = 1 litre of water. Fill a liter bottle for a kilo of water. No need to wing it since the more I learn about mushroom cultivation, the more I realise that it amounts to creating the best possible environment which means you eliminate outside variables.

  • @sheikhkelvin8650
    @sheikhkelvin8650 2 года назад

    Hopefully you going to view this comment. I have a couple of burning questions:
    1. How do you store SUBSTRATE that you don't intend to use anytime soon? ie the temperature and general environment and for how long can it last?
    2. How do you store LIQUID CULTURE that you don't intend to use anytime soon? ie the temperature and general environment and for how long can it last?

  • @mattnsim
    @mattnsim 3 года назад

    I’ve started using pine pellets because they are so much easier to get. I don’t do as big of a block though. Only 2.3kg.

    • @SuperHectortilla
      @SuperHectortilla 3 года назад

      How are your yields working with pine? I heard that oysters dont like to grow on it.

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад

      Oyster will grow fine on pine pellets.

  • @CheeseCake_Gamer_YT
    @CheeseCake_Gamer_YT 10 месяцев назад

    Guys pls help me, I want to know if you can use colonized mushroom blocks as spawn in another mushroom block

  • @raduandrei9901
    @raduandrei9901 3 года назад

    hello , i followed ur advice and used pine wood pellets for oyster m7shrooms, but the colonization is to slow, pls tell me what im doing wrong, to humid maybe? or...?
    thank you

    • @alexsfamily4166
      @alexsfamily4166 3 года назад +1

      humid and temperature is all ways the factor, a single celsius can make the difference, what tipe of oyster you use? you know the genetics strain code?
      for exemple a chestnut (pholiota adiposa) in a lab study have take 7 day to colonize at 16 c° but take 15 days at 15°, at 10c° 30days and at 20c° 37 days!!
      humidity and temperature change for the tipe of mushroom

    • @rayyanali4471
      @rayyanali4471 3 года назад

      Did you get a decent flush?

    • @raduandrei9901
      @raduandrei9901 3 года назад +1

      i got about 200-300 grams of mushrooms per 2 kg of substrate, i need to do a better sterilization , and maybe 10 % micelium per each bag. i only used 5 %

    • @alexsfamily4166
      @alexsfamily4166 3 года назад

      @@raduandrei9901 andrei if you are in new zeland or south africa i think is ok your pine sawdust becouse they use a tipe of pine that is good but if you are not there try to buy other wood or just straw, look up online on ebay.. also you can make a spore print and start a new genetic, maybe you mycelium is just too old or have been past to much step of cloning... and also you can give some supplement (is important) for have more big yeald, add wheat bran (animal farm feed) or rise bran or soy hulsk or you can try whit other stuff, the sterilizzation is not a big thinlg if you don't have contamination you do it right, also you can make more littel bags for have more biological efficency and for the low grow check the temperature of incubating is very important for have fast colonizing, if you tell me where you are and your temperature of incubation i can help you to find a better tipe of mush.. happy grow

  • @phuckyoutube5927
    @phuckyoutube5927 Год назад

    I wonder if you just save em up and then at the end of the year do a massiv run

  • @hobo2ification
    @hobo2ification Год назад

    im sorry for thw question but how much do u make with your youtube channel and thanks again for your answer

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  Год назад

      Not a lot!

    • @hobo2ification
      @hobo2ification Год назад

      @@OakandSpore any estimates maybe in your country is not much but maybe in mine it is any estimates ill apreciated and when i create my channel ill link yours promise

  • @enniaable
    @enniaable 2 года назад

    can we use your sterilising method on button mushrooms too?

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  2 года назад

      I am unsure, buttons use compost.

  • @JeancTejada
    @JeancTejada 3 года назад

    I liked the dubstep

  • @raduandrei9901
    @raduandrei9901 3 года назад

    hello, if i do not have soy do ad to the pine pellets, is it ok if i use grain seeds?

    • @alexsfamily4166
      @alexsfamily4166 3 года назад +1

      wheat bran is more like soy hullks and cost less, is used for feed the animals in farm, in italy i pay 15.9 euro 15kg of grain and 9 euro 15kg of bran wheat..

    • @rayyanali4471
      @rayyanali4471 3 года назад

      Cotton seed hulls, wheat bran, rice bran and other grain bran should work.

  • @jameswilcox5369
    @jameswilcox5369 3 года назад

    I have read that Oysters dont like substrates from aromatic woods.
    Pine, Cypress and Yellow wood for example. You mentioned you use pine pellets? Is there something about the pellets that you have access too that make this work?

    • @learningtolivewithhumans1859
      @learningtolivewithhumans1859 3 года назад

      depends on the oyster mate some will eat plastic and aluminium , blue and grey oysters will chew threw that like no ones business

    • @jameswilcox5369
      @jameswilcox5369 3 года назад +1

      @@learningtolivewithhumans1859 Thank you. Pine pellets are easy to get here where I am and so are Soy pellets. Messing with straw is just well.. a little messy.

    • @learningtolivewithhumans1859
      @learningtolivewithhumans1859 3 года назад

      @@jameswilcox5369 we can grow them on literally anything bro so don't let any one tell you you cant and don't let them put you down! your videos are wicked

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад +1

      When pine is pressed into pellets I think it breaks down the turpentine? Don't quote me on that though..

    • @jameswilcox5369
      @jameswilcox5369 3 года назад

      @@OakandSpore Thank you for the answers. Much love for South Africa

  • @yewenyi
    @yewenyi Год назад

    You could keep a spare humidifier block for such disasters.

  • @brucecunningham8848
    @brucecunningham8848 Месяц назад

    If you grow secondary saprotrophs, yes you can.

  • @heflar
    @heflar 3 года назад

    what happens if you use the spent pink oyster blocks to try do another round of pink oysters?

    • @AugustusBohn0
      @AugustusBohn0 3 года назад

      well the mycelium already processed everything it's capable of eating or it wouldn't be spent. you have to switch species for this method

    • @Yoggoth
      @Yoggoth 9 месяцев назад

      You need an experiment to know this for sure

  • @southerndime333
    @southerndime333 3 года назад

    cheers dood

    • @OakandSpore
      @OakandSpore  3 года назад +1

      Thanks for watching mate!!

    • @sylviagan1069
      @sylviagan1069 2 года назад

      Unsure to ask how to start to grow Hericium mushroom appreciate to hear from you
      Thanks

  • @lesziqubi8666
    @lesziqubi8666 Год назад

    Sir
    Hope you doing good please
    Quick one
    Can you mix mashroom substrate with soybeans and corn to feed pigs?