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Growing mushrooms


Guest cookoff013
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14 minutes ago, Farmboy91 said:

There was an episode of river cottage where Hugh was brought a log that was all ready to go to grow. Holes had been drilled in and it had little dowels inserted in.

From what I remember once it was in the ground you just let it get on with growing.

We've done this at our woodland.  I think that it can sometimes take up to five years before seeing any results.

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14 minutes ago, Farmboy91 said:

Ah ok I didn't realise they could take so long, I wouldn't mind one myself to be honest. 

I took advice from my stepson , he used to grow expensive mushrooms,  and sell them to the owner of the posh restaurant where he worked as a chef. 

We infected freshly cut oak logs , with native fungi.  As yet we've seen no signs of a mushroom payout.

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Mushroom season is only around the corner a lot of people are finding good amounts of chicken of the woods etc & puffballs already I would grab a couple good books & go for a stroll in the local woods plenty of good mushroom foraging groups on facebook for advice & helping identifying them 

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Grew them once from a kit,...I got 3 altogether.

The bottom picture looks like 'Earth Balls', inedible.

I used to pick Birch Boletus from under the trees near me, fry them up with garlic and butter!

I was reading a book the other day that said you should shake the mushroom over the ground after picking it to spread the spores, dont know how true that is.

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Have done for years, Shiitake and Oyster varieties are easiest. Well worth it and you'll be able to grow what you can't buy - dinner plate sized oysters and with a little skill you'll be able to grow low temperature shiitake versions with a flavour that will blow away anything you've previously had. You can get really decent yields as well. PM me for a few extra details and a bit of guidance and then I can signpost you to my spawn supplier and his continually upgraded growing guides. I'll add some real world experience and other methods.

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My father used to grow them - and had mushroom beds in an old low ceilinged brick built pigsty.  He managed to get some, but never reliably.  His view (if I remember right as this was 50 years ago) was that there was only a short period when the temperature/humidity was right (without assistance) in the UK.  It wasn't one of his great successes!

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19 hours ago, oldypigeonpopper said:

Hello, if your near a mushroom grower buy some bags of old compost and spread on a nice grass area and  don't forget to water in 🤔😁 then sit back and wait till Autumn

That's what my late father did. Except in otherwise redundant cold frames. That way you know as near 100% as possible that what comes up is safe and edible.

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2 hours ago, enfieldspares said:

That's what my late father did. Except in otherwise redundant cold frames. That way you know as near 100% as possible that what comes up is safe and edible.

Hello, it's a shame you don't find many wild mushrooms growing in the grass fields, maybe all the chemical spraying ??, 

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