The Garden Giant & "Mycototes"
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- Опубликовано: 11 дек 2013
- Paul Stamets uncovers one of his developments in the mycoremediation field. "Mycototes" offer a mobile/expandable cultivation structure. The mycotes can be used for capturing E. coli, breaking down hydrocarbons, and that the mushrooms that form are "clean" with the caveat that if heavy metals are in the substrate, that would render them inedible.
Thank you Paul stamets for sharing your work. All of which saves younger generations years worth of experimentation.
Thank God this world has you Paul stamets, from saving the bees, to medicine for immune systems for breast cancer, to national defense,, you truly are a one man on a mission force to be reckoned with and we'd all be in bad shape without your work,, so thank you
Great work Paul! Would love to see another book soon, and thanks for the inspiring videos!
Paul, nice work! Keep up the innovation. You're the best thing to happen to Micology in a long time!
I didn't know you had a RUclips channel! I've been a fan for many years, and you are one of the many reasons I chose to focus on fungi in my molecular biology education. :)
Wonderful and Amazing work done by Paul Stamets. Thank you.
As a chef, I gott'a say... I WANT THAT!
+crinoid1919 im no chef and i still want that ^^
Paul let's get your subscription to over 560k. You're the best!
I would love to have these mushies in the garden
So I imagine for smaller scale milk crates could work well, this is awesome to see as fuctional concept out of existing low cost materials that could easily be applied and used on the large/commercial scale ,,,,, Bioremediation is the future
Thank you so much for showing us the way.
i heard a couple talks by paul for myo filtration. i had a small coliform issue with our well (which i remediated the rural way - Cl), but i had wondered since reading about oyster mushrooms and straw bales from Mycelium Running about improving the waterways feeding our well. i'm guessing that growing garden giants around the well head wouldn't pose an issue? i was told to trim trees/plant life from the well head area, but i'm guessing garden giants on wood chips wouldn't increase the coliform count?
Very interesting, keep up the good work!
I couldn't help but think of the dam in Belize that engineers pretended would be built on hardrock but which in fact was built on limestone, and consequently, the water coming from the dam is contaminated with silt that has heavy metals. Can this mushroom grow in the tropics, to clean this water that has caused problems downstream?
I wonder how possible it is to perform selective breeding to produce a highly invasive type of psylocibin mushroom that grows this big. Just the thought of that is so incredable to me. Love your videos!
I have growed Stropharia rugosoannulata for many years.
What kind of wood chips do you use? Are there any that you would avoid? Thank you.
would you then place these downstream from a farm, what would be the most efficient way to utilize these for mycofiltration?
very nice!
Did I hear correctly?
About having to cull the mushrooms?
I live in nw florida so I really don't have any access to any kind of mushroom except the button mushrooms and shitake mushrooms at the supermarket.. I have wanted to try forever to try different mushrooms like the oyster, lions mane , hen of the woods, the morel,chanterelle and then I come across this one... I guess the question to ask is "what kind of flavors do these giants have to them? are they good? can you dry them for soups? I love mushrooms and I really want to try the basket grown ones of the oyster mushrooms myself one day.
im wondering if you could put a shade cloth over them and grow them anywhere? i lack a good spot for mushrooms i the city. also where can i get these totes?
hello paul, I read that these may be mutualistic to corn plants but what are your thoughts on other highly vegetative plants like kale? would introducing these to my garden beds improve my kale yeilds?
I've tested them with a variety of sprouted grains and vegatables, along with a bunch of Oyster species. These tend to form relationships with just about any seed so long as the seed is sprouted in the mycellium bed. I didn't see the same thing from the Oysters as much, except for Elm Oyster, which was very symbiotic with certain plants, like corn and peppers.
I pick mushrooms on my own land but they are nearly always spoiled by maggots. I've given up on it at this stage
WOW!!!!!
nice
I don't get it. How are the E. coli captured?
Where would someone get the garden giant for their garden?
there are sites that sell spore syringes and liquid cultures. I don't have one in particular to recommend since the one I use can't seem to keep wine cap aka garden giant in stock but do a little searching for something like "wine cap isolated" or "wine cap liquid culture"
I got 10 pounds of wine caps from 5 pounds of spawn in a 4 x 5 area. And still coming.......
I see Dusty fingers. :D
What is the name of this mushrooms pleas ? thank you all.
(a.k.a. wine cap, delicious)
Just wood chip and spores, huh?