PART 2 Grow Mushrooms in Your Garden
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- Опубліковано 26 лис 2024
- In this six part Mycology in the Garden video series, we will show you five low-cost and low-tech ways to grow edible mushrooms outdoors in shady areas where plants would not thrive. You can grow them alongside your vegetables, perennials, or in the shade of trees. These basic techniques require no special equipment or electricity, and can all be done outdoors using organic materials found such as straw, leaves, wood chips and logs which all make for great mushroom substrate.
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Thank you for sharing This simple but more informational understanding Video 👍
hi, thank you, your video is very inspiring in relation to ecosystems, I like gardening, where I live in Southeast Asia, right in Indonesia, can I partner?
Love your stuff kick on love it
Interesting... i came to see if you had stuff on blewit cultivation, which, there was a very small amount here-in, so 50/50.
I'll throw out this general piece of advice: oyster mushrooms aren't really a good companion mushroom to boost yields of a garden, but they do taste better when grown for their own sake.
Wine caps can form active mycorhizal relationships with plant roots, so they're the better option if a plant is capable of forming such a relationship.
As far as blewit's go, they might be kind of a crap shoot in Texas. They supposedly require frost to fruit. and seem to like the aerobic spots next to anaerobic compost, which is kind of a specific place in the world. They might not be capable of forming a symbiotic relation ship with plants directly, but, if you have hot, anaerobic compost, it'd still be good for the garden.