Morel hunting & scouting for outdoor places to grow.

Sassafras¥

Well-Known Member
yep, glove box.. Or if you can work quickly, simply turn off the AC lysol the air but let it fall before opening your bag, lysol will cause mutations. Alcohol wipe the outside of your bag and knife used to open the bag. Wear gloves and clean your gloves. Try not breathing directly on the bag. If you get a rich contam, during pinning, its ok! The shrooms are absolutely still edible. Just rinse them off and dehydrate them. Make a tea later or out of the fresh cleaned ones.
@Sassafras¥


builed a glovebox this way. i can vouch for it

https://www.shroomology.org/forums/topic/189-high-quality-glove-box-tek-by-str0be/

notes:

if you mess up with the arms of the tyvek suit use the legs. be extra fucking careful not to duct tape the gloves any amount tighter than they are in an unstretched state.

get xlarge nitrile gloves so you can easily slip your hands on and off.



if you dont give a hoot about spending that kinda dough on a glove box, simple buy some disposable nitrile gloves from the cleaning isle and get a storage bin and cut two 4" holes on the side NEATLY so later when you get some income you can upgrade that box to a better version glovebox
Hell yeah thnx 4 the info bro. I do believe I will tey and construct one before forking out any dough on one. Gotta save up some for the spores and substrate. Hell that one site Olive posted prices wasn't bad at all on the substrate... Yeah I'm set on the gloves. (: have an entire box of sterile gloves round here somewhere. Once I get all this going I will just post pics and updates here just to make sure I'm doing all this correctly.
 

Bakersfield

Well-Known Member
I use to grow shrooms back in the day, when PF Tech was still young.
I grew out spores in petri dishes then inoculated sterilized grain spawn in Mason jars, cased the soil in seed flats.

I did the glove box thing for a while until I lit it up one day. I had sprayed a bunch of Lysol in it and then lit my alcohol burner to sterilize my petri scalpel.
No real harm was done but I ended up buying a laminar flow hood. It made life way easier for me.
 

GreatwhiteNorth

Global Moderator
Staff member
Nothing to do with morels but a cool feel good story none the less.

An Anchorage couple first fell for mushrooms and then fell for each other.

Allison Dunbar stands in a shed filled with hanging bags of straw from which blue oyster mushrooms grow on April 11. (Marc Lester / Alaska Dispatch News)


When Allison Dunbar and Gabriel DeGange first started telling friends they were getting into the mushroom business, they got a few weird looks.

Growing mushrooms, an uncommon practice in Alaska that uses cultures and strains and is more akin to working in a lab than a garden, was not something people thought possible. It's done in heated indoor spaces, and DeGange had friends tell him that if they were growing something illegally they were doing a bad job at hiding it.

"It got more of a chuckle at first. But now that we have business cards, it's more official," Dunbar joked last week.

Talk to the two of them and it's clear their passions for mushrooms run deep. Over the last three years, the couple — she's 25, he's 27 — have built up their business, Far North Fungi, in their Airport Heights backyard. In February, they started selling mushrooms at The Mall at Sears' Center Market.

Their fungi farm is one of the first in Anchorage and makes them one of the few locally grown mushroom producers in the state. Each week they produce about 15 pounds of blue oyster mushrooms. Lately, the fungi have been popular. Even at $25 a pound, they're usually sold out before lunchtime.

Indoor hydroponic farming for fresh produce has gained traction in Alaska, but mushroom farming hasn't quite taken off in the same way, despite similarities in production.

[Hydroponic farm in a box offers portable, year-round crop growing]

Kate Mohatt, an ecologist with the Chugach National Forest and organizer of the popular Girdwood Fungus Fair, said investing in mushroom cultivation can be expensive up front. Growing mushrooms involves many different variables, she said, and contamination can be a problem.

But it has potential to fill a niche market. The selection of mushrooms available in grocery stores is often limited to white buttons and portobellos, since the species have long shelf lives and can withstand being shipped to Alaska. Oyster mushrooms and shiitakes are more delicate and have a harder time handling the long trip from the Lower 48.

Mohatt said that in other parts of the country, mushroom farming has become more popular, with grocery stores filled with an array of wild mushroom species.

"White button are OK," Mohatt said. "But it gets better. There are hundreds of different species you can cultivate; it's just matter of doing it."



Allison Dunbar, left, and Gabriel DeGange cultivate mushrooms at their Anchorage home and began their Far North Fungi business earlier this year. They were photographed on April 11. (Marc Lester / Alaska Dispatch News)
Mushroom meet-cute

In 2011, both Dunbar and DeGange were watching a Bioneers conference talk from mycologist Paul Stamets. Stamets, an expert in the field of mushrooms, gave a presentation titled "How Mushrooms Can Change the World."

It inspired both of them to delve deeply into the world of mushroom cultivation.

Dunbar has been obsessed with fungi since her mother gave her Stamets' book, "Mycellium Running," when she was 15. Growing up in Southern Appalachia, she'd read stories about using mushroomsto filter toxins left behind from mountaintop mining in the region. She also saw the mushrooms as a potential food crop after watching her father work as an organic farmer.

"It was melting together farming and agriculture and engineering with one species — with mushrooms," she said.

DeGange, then a commercial fisherman working outside of Homer, wanted to shift from catching to producing food. Before the talk, he admitted his biggest interest in mushrooms was smooshing puffballs underfoot each fall.

But the talk served as a lightbulb moment, when DeGange saw the potential of mushrooms both as a business and as a way to impact the environment.


A bowl is filled with blue oyster mushrooms harvested for an upcoming Far North Fungi farmers market sale. (Marc Lester / Alaska Dispatch News)
The two met in 2013 at a Stamets-led mushroom cultivation workshop in Washington state. DeGange came back to Alaska ready to start a mushroom business. Dunbar went back to Atlanta to continue working at a mushroom farm.

They left the workshop as friends but kept talking, with Dunbar helping DeGange sort through technical issues related to starting up the farm. Dunbar said she knew immediately that DeGange was going to be someone she wanted in her life.

"I had gone the past few years with no one in my age group really understanding why I cared about mushrooms, kind of thinking of it as more of a joke," she said. "Seeing someone who was just as gung-ho as me was very exciting."


She left Georgia in the summer of 2014 to come to Alaska and help DeGange get the operation going. He had nothing more than the shell of what would later become the insulated greenhouse. By the end of the summer, the two had fallen in love and made plans to get the business going. Dunbar flew back to Atlanta, packed her car and drove up to Alaska two weeks later, just in time to start her first fall semester studying civil engineering at the University of Alaska Anchorage.

There were plans to get the mushroom operation started right away, but between work and school, getting the farm off the ground took longer than expected.

Mushroom labs and 'synthetic logs'

Dunbar and DeGange have invested about $5,000 in the whole operation. They've cordoned off a small portion of their house behind the laundry room as the "lab," where mushroom strains are mixed with oat, barley and millet.

In their backyard is a small, 165-square-foot blue shed. The two finished building it last fall using reclaimed wood from when DeGange's parents redid their deck. Inside are seven rows, each filled with what they call "synthetic logs" — plastic bags hanging in columns, each filled with pasteurized straw and a mixture of the grains, each of which has been inundated with mushroom's root-like mycelium.


Blue oyster mushrooms grow from a vertical column of straw in a humidified shed at Allison Dunbar and Gabriel DeGange’s home. (Marc Lester / Alaska Dispatch News)
Small holes punched into the plastic allow the fruiting body of the mushroom to expand, first emerging as tightly clustered bunches before reaching outward and growing into stacks of white bodies with silvery gray tops. Dunbar and DeGange harvest the fist-sized bunches about every five days.

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They finally finished everything in January, slowly cultivating mushrooms to sell to family and friends before branching out to the market. The proof of concept is working, they said, and they plan to expand to a larger location in just a couple of weeks. They hope that will be in time to expand to other farmers markets this summer and maybe even to restaurants.


Gabriel DeGange, co-owner of Far North Fungi, holds a living culture of maitake mushrooms on April 11. (Marc Lester / Alaska Dispatch News)
DeGange said Dunbar's experience working on a mushroom farm was helpful for avoiding pitfalls in getting the operation off the ground. Being a couple has also helped with the business. Dunbar said things like being able to sense when the other is stressed have made for smoother operations.

They hope to one day expand their operation beyond just food applications. DeGange, using his fishing background, would like eventually to produce a compostable fish cooler that could take the place of Styrofoam. That's at least five or 10 years down the road, he said. For now, the focus is on fungi as food.

"We're right at the edge of the pool, ready to jump in," Dunbar said.
 

Olive Drab Green

Well-Known Member
Here's today. Both are Mazatapec (Mazatec) cubes. After these rye berries become fully colonized, I am then going to mix both of these 1lbs bags with 5lbs of mushroom compost/bulk sub before introducing fruiting conditions.

Spawn 1: IMG_5818.JPG
IMG_5819.JPG


Spawn 2:
IMG_5820.JPGIMG_5821.JPG
 

Sassafras¥

Well-Known Member
Here's today. Both are Mazatapec (Mazatec) cubes. After these rye berries become fully colonized, I am then going to mix both of these 1lbs bags with 5lbs of mushroom compost/bulk sub before introducing fruiting conditions.

Spawn 1: View attachment 3938567
View attachment 3938569


Spawn 2:
View attachment 3938571View attachment 3938572
Basically what I was asking was how you go about transferring the spawning grain to you're compost without it becoming contaminated? I am guessing by using a make shift glove box & a shit ton of disefectant spray:confused:
 

Olive Drab Green

Well-Known Member
Basically what I was asking was how you go about transferring the spawning grain to you're compost without it becoming contaminated? I am guessing by using a make shift glove box & a shit ton of disefectant spray:confused:
Both are sealed and sterilized. You do this in a still air environment or glovebox. You shouldn't worry excessively of the spawn is colonized and everything is initially sterilized if you're at least careful. In minimal amounts, it's likely the mycelium will overtake any potential contams. Or so I have read.
 

Sassafras¥

Well-Known Member
Both are sealed and sterilized. You do this in a still air environment or glovebox. You shouldn't worry excessively of the spawn is colonized and everything is initially sterilized if you're at least careful. In minimal amounts, it's likely the mycelium will overtake any potential contams. Or so I have read.
Ok. So let's say I purchased a bag with the rye and have inoculated it and it's starting to colinize. Could I take that bag and transfer it into a bigger substrate such as a "log" or a BIG tote box with compost in it to began fruiting? Such as in the pictures, wearing gloves of course while doing so? What I'd like to do is move the spawn to a compost in a tote like the pic in the middle and fruit in that. Just wondering if that would be ok to do? images-28.jpg 3rdTime6-24-0901.jpg 673239427-brokenup.jpg
 

Olive Drab Green

Well-Known Member
Ok. So let's say I purchased a bag with the rye and have inoculated it and it's starting to colinize. Could I take that bag and transfer it into a bigger substrate such as a "log" or a BIG tote box with compost in it to began fruiting? Such as in the pictures, wearing gloves of course while doing so? What I'd like to do is move the spawn to a compost in a tote like the pic in the middle and fruit in that. Just wondering if that would be ok to do? View attachment 3941392 View attachment 3941394 View attachment 3941393
That's what bulk subbing is. You colonize the bulk sub in warm darkness after you mix it with the grain spawn, just like you do the grain spawn, and after colonization, introduce fruiting conditions.
 

Sassafras¥

Well-Known Member
That's what bulk subbing is. You colonize the bulk sub in warm darkness after you mix it with the grain spawn, just like you do the grain spawn, and after colonization, introduce fruiting conditions.
Ok cool. So what would you say prime fruiting conditions would be bro?
 

iHearAll

Well-Known Member
Ok cool. So what would you say prime fruiting conditions would be bro?
100% humidity and decent fresh air exchange. polyester pillow stuffing is used to filter the tub's air exchange with the room's when growing in monotubs. google monotub tek for a better description of the process of sterilizing the substrate that your grain spawn goes into.


edit:
here's a good TEK. yielded 6oz cracker dry for the first flush
http://en.psilosophy.info/detailed_grow_log_tek_penis_envy_in_a_monotub.html
 
Last edited:

Sassafras¥

Well-Known Member
100% humidity and decent fresh air exchange. polyester pillow stuffing is used to filter the tub's air exchange with the room's when growing in monotubs. google monotub tek for a better description of the process of sterilizing the substrate that your grain spawn goes into.


edit:
here's a good TEK. yielded 6oz cracker dry for the first flush
http://en.psilosophy.info/detailed_grow_log_tek_penis_envy_in_a_monotub.html
Damn now that's very detailed and alot of steps imo. Lol. Goin check into it though. Thnx 4 the link.
 

Dr.Pecker

Well-Known Member
You should teach me. I don't know the first thing about mushroom hunting. Or identification. I know what a morel looks like, but I'm one of those guys likely to pick a Death Cap/Destroying Angel by mistake.

I do love me some black and white truffles, though. I think I'll make myself some Gorgonzola Fries with Truffle Oil tomorrow.
Just about every good mushroom has a lookalike bad mushroom. Morels have an evil twin falsecap that could make people sick.A falsecap is not attached to the stem like a true morel. I would hate to see someone get sick from eating the wrong kind.
these are falsecaps.
 

Olive Drab Green

Well-Known Member
Just about every good mushroom has a lookalike bad mushroom. Morels have an evil twin falsecap that could make people sick.A falsecap is not attached to the stem like a true morel. I would hate to see someone get sick from eating the wrong kind.
these are falsecaps.
Bounce the graviton particle beam off the main deflector dish.
 
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