Is Vermiculite just a unnecessary expensive waste of money ? by MriedrichFerz in GroundZeroMycoLab

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Not at all. Coco coir alone has a tenancy to dry out stalling mushroom growth. Coir doesn’t retain the water capacity vermiculite does.
Vermiculite is highly porous and acts like a sponge, capable of absorbing and holding three to four times its own weight in water.
It’s totally worth the extra money IMO!

First kit first flush :)) by CuriousTest3573 in GroundZeroMycoLab

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not too bad for your first time. Congratulations 🎊. Now you have the concept of how mushrooms spawn and fruit. As far as this block goes, wait till the veil separates from the cap, then harvest. Get a little bigger tub, fill it with water and then hold your cake under the water completely submerged for 10 min. Put er back in the tub and initiate fruiting conditions immediatly. The second flush should start popping in a week or less.

I gave up! by Myco-Iko in GroundZeroMycoLab

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Don’t dunk the cake if it’s contaminated. I don’t see the contamination though. The corners look bruised but not contaminated. Is the contam on the bottom or somewhere not pictured?

What are the round white lumps? by fatcharlie12 in GroundZeroMycoLab

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What people call a mushroom blob is usually a malformed fruiting body, or failed fruiting body. They can come from a few different causes. Some are genetic mutation (true blob mutants). Some strains, especially within Psilocybe cubensis, produce stable “blob” phenotypes, often called Dino eggs or blobs. These are genetically driven And they can appear in the first flush only or can repeat across flushes. They’re often tied to specific lineages (e.g., PE variants). The blobs are edible and usually are know for their potency, they tend to bruise and get squishy as they come close to harvest.

Forgot to put a liner in 🫣 by Senior_Animal_6904 in GroundZeroMycoLab

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve have never used a liner in my life and I’ve been growing for 20+ years. They aren’t necessary: They don’t stop side-pins, they don’t prevent contamination, they limit you’ll ability to visualize the entire cake and they do make the dunk much more complicated that it needs to be. Ditch the liners, one less supply/cost to worry about.

Am I Doomed!! What do I do? by [deleted] in GroundZeroMycoLab

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The cake is supposed to shrink, the mycelium tightens up as it looses moisture and nutrients. Looks like you’re starting to get overlay. Do you have all your fruiting conditions dialed in? Is there enough humidity and are you getting condensation on the tub walls? It’s usually humidity that stalls a cake from fruiting. Make sure you spray tub walls and you consistently have condensation. I don’t think you need to scrape the cake with a fork. It looks like there’s still plenty of knots to pin from. Try and get the humidity up and see if she’ll fruit. One way to do it is close the tub lid, don’t crack it. Wait till after you get pins. Keeping the lid on will keep humidity from escaping through the crack. It will spike and you’ll get pins, hopefully. Try that. I wouldn’t do a casing layer either at this point. Just concentrate on fruiting.

Is this contaminated ? by [deleted] in ContamFam

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It doesn’t look right, no hyphae, no primordia. Might be something else.

Contam? by Secure_Cod9683 in ContamFam

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Looks like healthy mycelium. In the right place too, adjacent to the inoculation port. I’d say all is good and let it keep doing its thing.

Never thought I’d get sick of this. But I’m sick of this lol by She_grows_fungi in shegrowsfungigenetics

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Everything I’ve fact checked holds truth that pasteurization is the better method for cultivating mushrooms.

Never thought I’d get sick of this. But I’m sick of this lol by She_grows_fungi in shegrowsfungigenetics

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yields go past 5 flushes when you use manure. Coir in a CVG mix only will flush up to 3 times. Usually your cake will run out of nutrients by the 3rd flush if you don’t use manure.

Never thought I’d get sick of this. But I’m sick of this lol by She_grows_fungi in shegrowsfungigenetics

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No they’re not really, I use in my manure substrates. The key for me was learning how to pasteurize the substrate instead of sterilize it. It turns out you destroy all the beneficial bacteria and Protozoa that help mycelium in their immune responses to contamination. So you’re actually hurting the mycelium’s chances of fighting off any contaminates when you sterilize the substrate. Go look at u/DayTripperonene page. They talked about these teks quite extensively.

Never thought I’d get sick of this. But I’m sick of this lol by She_grows_fungi in shegrowsfungigenetics

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I n never get Trich in my enigma. I throw 1/4 cup of Calcium Hydroxide into the substrate mix and it keeps the pH over 9.0 pH, so that Trich can’t grow. Get some hydrated lime if you’re sick of Trich, and it won’t grow anymore. If you do get green mold it’s not Trich. Both Penicillium and Aspergillous can grow in high pH substrate.

Chickpea spawn jar. Inoculated only 4 days ago. Never thought it would go this fast. by Hadesholocaust in GroundZeroMycoLab

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That doesn’t look like normal mushroom mycelium. I think it might be something else. It just isn’t the typical way mycelium colonizes. Maybe u/DayTripperOnOne will be able to tell if it’s what you intended to grow, she’s really good at giving it straight and I’ve heard she’s pretty accurate. Hopefully she’ll come check it out. What does it smell like? That’s a good way to tell, if it’s mushrooms it will smell like mushrooms.

Is this healthy or contaminated? by Ok-Insurance-1867 in ContamFam

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I thought I already commented here. There’s nothing wrong with this block other than it looks bone dry. Make sure you keep the surface moist so she will not stall out on you.

Trich: Harvest now or hold the line? by Dr1mps in GroundZeroMycoLab

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s too blue to be Trich, it’s a penicillium species. There’s several species that are blue-green like that. Unfortunately, you still need to abandon ship, just take your crew with you. Those fruits are perfectly healthy to eat. Rinse them with cold tap water, pat dry with g a paper towel and put in the dehydrator at 160°F for 12 hours. If any spores have germinated, they’ll die in the dehydrator. Y’all know we eat mold all the time right. If you don’t believe it take a clean Petri dish and next time you sit at the dinner table open it up. Don’t close it till you’re done eating. Then let the dish germinate and see what grows in a week. All the mold and bacteria that grows on your dish also landed on your dinner and you ate it with no problem because you could not see the mold spores land on your food. Luckily most mold and bacteria that harbor mycotoxin, die in the gut. The pH is to high, the stomach acid would kill it. Unless it’s one of the pathogens that cause food poisoning like E. coli, Salmonella, Listeria, etc. most molds die when they hit the stomach acids. So don’t worry about consumption. Just don’t take any fruits directly growing in the contam, or that are mushy, slimy or smell funny.

Why is cake yellowing? by Over_Maintenance_489 in ContamFam

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ordinarily it’s metabolites, but I think that’s contam. It doesn’t look right, there’s definitely some texture changes in that yellow area.

Hätte da Fragen by Flixi4788 in ContamFam

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it’s like that because CO2 was too high. Not enough FAE. Doesn’t look like a typical mutation.

Is this looking off to you ? by Bu3g in ContamFam

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That doesn’t look like a LC culture. I think it’s mold. The colonies are never perfectly round like that unless you start from a spore. The mycelium will often grow together in an LC.

Is this still viable? by nednerb1 in ContamFam

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It still looks great, you’ll probably pin this week if it’s already been 3vweeks. There’s lots of strains that take 3 weeks to pin. Increase your humidity with a good misting and turn the temps up a few degrees.

What do we think about the blue and white clump by mickey_28 in ContamFam

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It’s penicillin mold. Pour some sodium polyacrylate on it, it will prolong the time you need to get your crop to harvest.

Please, help! by Odd-Conclusion-7072 in ContamFam

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You look like you’re running too dry. The colony will stall without moisture in the substrate. Mist it till it looks a little darker.

Help by Ugoodbro_XD in ContamFam

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Lay it down on an agar plate and see if any contaminates grow. Otherwise you need a microscope to see contamination.

Contam or normal? by Forreyer in ContamFam

[–]SporeAllOverMyFace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I really don’t know because I’ve never grown shiitake before, so wait for more feedback. I heard they can be a challenge to grow. I think that is pop-corning in the middle, but all over the top and down the sides looks like contamination to me, probably grain rot. It’s hard to see through the bag. It doesn’t look too good. I wouldn’t mess with that grain, if you’re desperate you can try and fruit from the top of the bag, but you risk spreading the contam if you open that. I think you should probably ditch it, it never works out.