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creepyviking
buttfugler
Registered: 01/03/10
Posts: 66
Loc: nebulon 1
Last seen: 14 years, 15 days
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Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing,
#12269639 - 03/25/10 01:21 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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I've gone through posts about the possibility of Mushroom compost as a casing product both having possible pros and cons, with the basis on straw and the basic product... compost with nutrients, and as a cover for a non nutritive casing, judging from everyone who talks about it yet never testing their theories I put forward my cash for a set of Golden teachers, burma, and cambodian strain syringes to test the use of Mushroom compost as a viable casing.
1.Started each with WBS in 1 pint jars total 12 jars. 2.Sterilization in pressure cooker 90 min. 3.Cool down period with inoculation after. 4.Colonization period 5.2 Cakes broken apart from each set and cased with Mushroom compost 6.2 Cakes broken apart from each set and cased with vermiculite/peat moss 7.Allowed to continue 8.Vermiculite/peat moss mix pinning/fruiting 9.Mushroom compost no viable growth past casing layer. 10.Thesis of experiment... Mushroom compost doesnt do shit and is useless in the realm of mushroom cultivation haha.
Gonna shake the mushroom compost off the crumbled cakes and replace with the 50/50 mix and salvage.
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Dionili
Second Rate Mycologist
Registered: 08/18/09
Posts: 2,194
Loc: Between a Rock and a Hard...
Last seen: 7 months, 7 days
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: creepyviking]
#12270307 - 03/25/10 02:54 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
creepyviking said: I've gone through posts about the possibility of Mushroom compost as a casing product both having possible pros and cons, with the basis on straw and the basic product... compost with nutrients, and as a cover for a non nutritive casing, judging from everyone who talks about it yet never testing their theories I put forward my cash for a set of Golden teachers, burma, and cambodian strain syringes to test the use of Mushroom compost as a viable casing.
1.Started each with WBS in 1 pint jars total 12 jars. 2.Sterilization in pressure cooker 90 min. 3.Cool down period with inoculation after. 4.Colonization period 5.2 Cakes broken apart from each set and cased with Mushroom compost 6.2 Cakes broken apart from each set and cased with vermiculite/peat moss 7.Allowed to continue 8.Vermiculite/peat moss mix pinning/fruiting 9.Mushroom compost no viable growth past casing layer. 10.Thesis of experiment... Mushroom compost doesnt do shit and is useless in the realm of mushroom cultivation haha.
Gonna shake the mushroom compost off the crumbled cakes and replace with the 50/50 mix and salvage.
big yellow bag?
dont waste your time.
gets some wbs and some coir;.
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SomeNewGuy
Sir
Registered: 03/08/10
Posts: 215
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Dionili]
#12270641 - 03/25/10 03:46 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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I believe it is just used substrate from commercial mushroom growers that has been composted. So I think the mushrooms ate all the food out of it for our uses. But it should still function as a non nutritious casing... Most likely anti-fungals were added?
-------------------- Looking for Oyster and Ps. Cyan. Trade. PM me
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Doc_T
Random Dude
Registered: 03/06/09
Posts: 42,395
Loc: Colorado
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: SomeNewGuy]
#12270982 - 03/25/10 04:43 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
SomeNewGuy said: Most likely anti-fungals were added?
At a mushroom farm?
-------------------- You make it all possible. Doesn't it feel good?
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Damion5050
Mush Doctor
Registered: 05/01/08
Posts: 12,493
Loc: Lost In Translation !
Last seen: 3 years, 2 months
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Doc_T]
#12270999 - 03/25/10 04:46 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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SomeNewGuy is right on the point that it is used mushroom substrate that has been composted and sold for your garden, it is not the best thing to try and grow on. As far as anti-fungals, I am not sure of that one.
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SomeNewGuy
Sir
Registered: 03/08/10
Posts: 215
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Damion5050]
#12271140 - 03/25/10 05:06 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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I mean after they are done with it. So mushrooms don't grow in consumers garden. Eliminating the need for their product.... IDK i added the ? to be safe.
-------------------- Looking for Oyster and Ps. Cyan. Trade. PM me
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creepyviking
buttfugler
Registered: 01/03/10
Posts: 66
Loc: nebulon 1
Last seen: 14 years, 15 days
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: SomeNewGuy]
#12271941 - 03/25/10 06:58 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Well this was just a control experiment using organic mushroom compost, in all probability it is in fact used substrate, and my hypothesis was to pertain as to whether it can act as non nutritive casing layer for growth... that is a no. As to the brand it is Rocky mountain compost I believe, white bag with mushroom on it (obvious). all organic. in terms of nutritive value? it may perhaps have enough to count as a slight nutritive additive, but for the experiment it shows a no go, might tweek a couple things... say water % and volume.
to dionilli: I hope you read the steps taken, the basis for the cakes are in fact WBS, coir? I use coir on a time to time basis, notice this is an experiment, nothing more to in fact see whether store bought mushroom compost have any cultivation value, and the area in which I live and where you live differ in product brands. soley on location, I live in the southwest which may have a product different then what you have in your location.
I trust anyone viewing this knows that mushroom compost is in fact spent substrate and doesnt need to point that out... and again this is an experiment to answer the question whether this can actually be used to cut corners. It doesnt.
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Shea25
Just some guy
Registered: 01/27/09
Posts: 7,772
Loc: Westcoast Canada
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: creepyviking]
#12271960 - 03/25/10 07:01 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
creepyviking said: Well this was just a control experiment using organic mushroom compost, in all probability it is in fact used substrate, and my hypothesis was to pertain as to whether it can act as non nutritive casing layer for growth... that is a no. As to the brand it is Rocky mountain compost I believe, white bag with mushroom on it (obvious). all organic. in terms of nutritive value? it may perhaps have enough to count as a slight nutritive additive, but for the experiment it shows a no go, might tweek a couple things... say water % and volume.
to dionilli: I hope you read the steps taken, the basis for the cakes are in fact WBS, coir? I use coir on a time to time basis, notice this is an experiment, nothing more to in fact see whether store bought mushroom compost have any cultivation value, and the area in which I live and where you live differ in product brands. soley on location, I live in the southwest which may have a product different then what you have in your location.
I trust anyone viewing this knows that mushroom compost is in fact spent substrate and doesnt need to point that out... and again this is an experiment to answer the question whether this can actually be used to cut corners. It doesnt.
Why bother breaking up and casing cakes. They preform better as a cake.
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creepyviking
buttfugler
Registered: 01/03/10
Posts: 66
Loc: nebulon 1
Last seen: 14 years, 15 days
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Dionili]
#12271970 - 03/25/10 07:03 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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I hope you read that this is in fact an experiment on a hypothesis? not a subject of coir and wbs for cultivation, we all know coir is a premium product for casings and I dont need to do an experiment on something obvious. this was an experiment based on a theory people are afraid to try themselves based on the subject at hand. appreciate your input though.
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Shea25
Just some guy
Registered: 01/27/09
Posts: 7,772
Loc: Westcoast Canada
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: creepyviking]
#12271990 - 03/25/10 07:05 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
creepyviking said: I hope you read that this is in fact an experiment on a hypothesis? not a subject of coir and wbs for cultivation, we all know coir is a premium product for casings and I dont need to do an experiment on something obvious. this was an experiment based on a theory people are afraid to try themselves based on the subject at hand. appreciate your input though.
Coir is for Bulk not casings.
Casing= non nutritional micro climate applied to the surface of a sub
Sub= nutritional mix that myc loves and consumes
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creepyviking
buttfugler
Registered: 01/03/10
Posts: 66
Loc: nebulon 1
Last seen: 14 years, 15 days
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Shea25]
#12271998 - 03/25/10 07:06 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
Shea25 said:
Quote:
creepyviking said: Well this was just a control experiment using organic mushroom compost, in all probability it is in fact used substrate, and my hypothesis was to pertain as to whether it can act as non nutritive casing layer for growth... that is a no. As to the brand it is Rocky mountain compost I believe, white bag with mushroom on it (obvious). all organic. in terms of nutritive value? it may perhaps have enough to count as a slight nutritive additive, but for the experiment it shows a no go, might tweek a couple things... say water % and volume.
to dionilli: I hope you read the steps taken, the basis for the cakes are in fact WBS, coir? I use coir on a time to time basis, notice this is an experiment, nothing more to in fact see whether store bought mushroom compost have any cultivation value, and the area in which I live and where you live differ in product brands. soley on location, I live in the southwest which may have a product different then what you have in your location.
I trust anyone viewing this knows that mushroom compost is in fact spent substrate and doesnt need to point that out... and again this is an experiment to answer the question whether this can actually be used to cut corners. It doesnt.
Why bother breaking up and casing cakes. They preform better as a cake.
True but I have not cultivated via cakes in 2 years, nor would I want to return to cakes alone, I prefer casing and bulk growing, one is for the yields is far greater than cakes and I have yet to get any contaminates, in my opionion cakes are for newbies.
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Shea25
Just some guy
Registered: 01/27/09
Posts: 7,772
Loc: Westcoast Canada
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: creepyviking]
#12272011 - 03/25/10 07:07 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
creepyviking said:
Quote:
Shea25 said:
Quote:
creepyviking said: Well this was just a control experiment using organic mushroom compost, in all probability it is in fact used substrate, and my hypothesis was to pertain as to whether it can act as non nutritive casing layer for growth... that is a no. As to the brand it is Rocky mountain compost I believe, white bag with mushroom on it (obvious). all organic. in terms of nutritive value? it may perhaps have enough to count as a slight nutritive additive, but for the experiment it shows a no go, might tweek a couple things... say water % and volume.
to dionilli: I hope you read the steps taken, the basis for the cakes are in fact WBS, coir? I use coir on a time to time basis, notice this is an experiment, nothing more to in fact see whether store bought mushroom compost have any cultivation value, and the area in which I live and where you live differ in product brands. soley on location, I live in the southwest which may have a product different then what you have in your location.
I trust anyone viewing this knows that mushroom compost is in fact spent substrate and doesnt need to point that out... and again this is an experiment to answer the question whether this can actually be used to cut corners. It doesnt.
Why bother breaking up and casing cakes. They preform better as a cake.
True but I have not cultivated via cakes in 2 years, nor would I want to return to cakes alone, I prefer casing and bulk growing, one is for the yields is far greater than cakes and I have yet to get any contaminates, in my opionion cakes are for newbies.
Lol
Cakes fruited as cake will out preform cased cakes. Cup for cup cakes are then BEST sub there is.
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Damion5050
Mush Doctor
Registered: 05/01/08
Posts: 12,493
Loc: Lost In Translation !
Last seen: 3 years, 2 months
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Shea25]
#12272023 - 03/25/10 07:09 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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creepyviking
buttfugler
Registered: 01/03/10
Posts: 66
Loc: nebulon 1
Last seen: 14 years, 15 days
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Shea25]
#12272046 - 03/25/10 07:11 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
Shea25 said:
Quote:
creepyviking said: I hope you read that this is in fact an experiment on a hypothesis? not a subject of coir and wbs for cultivation, we all know coir is a premium product for casings and I dont need to do an experiment on something obvious. this was an experiment based on a theory people are afraid to try themselves based on the subject at hand. appreciate your input though.
Coir is for Bulk not casings.
Casing= non nutritional micro climate applied to the surface of a sub
Sub= nutritional mix that myc loves and consumes
Actually it can be used for casings also, I use it for casings, and so do many others, coir is like bacon really, it goes good on anything. substrate... yea I'm pretty sure thats what the def. is, yet I dont see what the relation is to the topic at hand. back to the subject... mushroom compost fails at growth or even pinning.
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creepyviking
buttfugler
Registered: 01/03/10
Posts: 66
Loc: nebulon 1
Last seen: 14 years, 15 days
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Damion5050]
#12272057 - 03/25/10 07:13 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
Damion5050 said:
I agree haha.
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Shea25
Just some guy
Registered: 01/27/09
Posts: 7,772
Loc: Westcoast Canada
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: creepyviking]
#12272094 - 03/25/10 07:17 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Casing Cubes = waste of time
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creepyviking
buttfugler
Registered: 01/03/10
Posts: 66
Loc: nebulon 1
Last seen: 14 years, 15 days
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Shea25]
#12272117 - 03/25/10 07:20 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
Shea25 said:
Quote:
creepyviking said:
Quote:
Shea25 said:
Quote:
creepyviking said: Well this was just a control experiment using organic mushroom compost, in all probability it is in fact used substrate, and my hypothesis was to pertain as to whether it can act as non nutritive casing layer for growth... that is a no. As to the brand it is Rocky mountain compost I believe, white bag with mushroom on it (obvious). all organic. in terms of nutritive value? it may perhaps have enough to count as a slight nutritive additive, but for the experiment it shows a no go, might tweek a couple things... say water % and volume.
to dionilli: I hope you read the steps taken, the basis for the cakes are in fact WBS, coir? I use coir on a time to time basis, notice this is an experiment, nothing more to in fact see whether store bought mushroom compost have any cultivation value, and the area in which I live and where you live differ in product brands. soley on location, I live in the southwest which may have a product different then what you have in your location.
I trust anyone viewing this knows that mushroom compost is in fact spent substrate and doesnt need to point that out... and again this is an experiment to answer the question whether this can actually be used to cut corners. It doesnt.
Why bother breaking up and casing cakes. They preform better as a cake.
True but I have not cultivated via cakes in 2 years, nor would I want to return to cakes alone, I prefer casing and bulk growing, one is for the yields is far greater than cakes and I have yet to get any contaminates, in my opionion cakes are for newbies.
Lol
Cakes fruited as cake will out preform cased cakes. Cup for cup cakes are then BEST sub there is.
Intrigueing... fruited cakes in fact do not out perform cased crumbled layered cakes in yield. and never will, you show me one example where one pint sized fruited cake out yield a tray of cased CRUMBLED product.
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creepyviking
buttfugler
Registered: 01/03/10
Posts: 66
Loc: nebulon 1
Last seen: 14 years, 15 days
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Shea25]
#12272140 - 03/25/10 07:23 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
Shea25 said: Casing Cubes = waste of time
If casing cubes are a waste of time why does roadkill have mass yields with casing? why do I get out 60+ wet grams from cased trays? why do SEASONED growers case bulk trays?
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Shea25
Just some guy
Registered: 01/27/09
Posts: 7,772
Loc: Westcoast Canada
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: creepyviking] 1
#12272142 - 03/25/10 07:24 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Lol I'm glad you bought that up. Here are two cakes 200mls of sub, each yielded about 10 grams dry each first flush
After each cake has flushed Im talking 14+ grams dry per 200 mls of sub
Find any other sub that will do that CUP FOR CUP
You wont, Casing cakes is a waste
Edited by Shea25 (03/25/10 07:26 PM)
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Damion5050
Mush Doctor
Registered: 05/01/08
Posts: 12,493
Loc: Lost In Translation !
Last seen: 3 years, 2 months
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: creepyviking]
#12272155 - 03/25/10 07:25 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Your heading in the wrong direction here so to speak. If you take 1 BRF cake and fruit it as is, then take 1 BRF cake and crumble it and case with a peat/verm casing layer. The BRF cake will outperform the cased cake. BRF is pound for pound the most nutritious substrate. The most important part of that sentence is POUND FOR POUND. Cakes are small and people think they don't perform well but this is far from the truth. I mean 6 grams dry from 1 cup of BRF..
Edited by Damion5050 (03/25/10 07:26 PM)
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iluvfungi
Registered: 06/17/09
Posts: 1,488
Loc: Oakland, CA USA
Last seen: 12 years, 10 months
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Damion5050]
#12272217 - 03/25/10 07:33 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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They sterilize the mushroom compost after it comes from the fungi farm. Technically the fungi growing materials weren't "exhausted." They cycle the material every 45 days, as to not risk bacterial contamination of their commercial farm.
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creepyviking
buttfugler
Registered: 01/03/10
Posts: 66
Loc: nebulon 1
Last seen: 14 years, 15 days
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Shea25]
#12272223 - 03/25/10 07:34 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
Shea25 said: Lol I'm glad you bought that up. Here are two cakes 200mls of sub, each yielded about 10 grams dry each first flush
After each cake has flushed Im talking 14+ grams dry per 200 mls of sub
Find any other sub that will do that CUP FOR CUP
You wont, Casing cakes is a waste
I wouldnt know, I'm used to racking 50+ dry grams per tray per flush with the same CUP FOR CUP. I say its a matter of preference and patience in quality.
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creepyviking
buttfugler
Registered: 01/03/10
Posts: 66
Loc: nebulon 1
Last seen: 14 years, 15 days
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Damion5050]
#12272232 - 03/25/10 07:36 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
Damion5050 said: Your heading in the wrong direction here so to speak. If you take 1 BRF cake and fruit it as is, then take 1 BRF cake and crumble it and case with a peat/verm casing layer. The BRF cake will outperform the cased cake. BRF is pound for pound the most nutritious substrate. The most important part of that sentence is POUND FOR POUND. Cakes are small and people think they don't perform well but this is far from the truth. I mean 6 grams dry from 1 cup of BRF..
haha where does BRF come into play on the topic? hmmmm BRF is def a plus... have you tried Rye flour?
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creepyviking
buttfugler
Registered: 01/03/10
Posts: 66
Loc: nebulon 1
Last seen: 14 years, 15 days
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: iluvfungi]
#12272265 - 03/25/10 07:42 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
iluvfungi said: They sterilize the mushroom compost after it comes from the fungi farm. Technically the fungi growing materials weren't "exhausted." They cycle the material every 45 days, as to not risk bacterial contamination of their commercial farm.
True, yet everyone seems the ask about mushroom compost in reference to cultivation, and since I havent read if anyone tried it. figured I'd get a crack at it... I should say the end result wasnt surprising. hopes this answers some curiosity people have about it... waste of 3 bucks haha. but oddly enough my fruits are bigger than the control cakes I left on the side...
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creepyviking
buttfugler
Registered: 01/03/10
Posts: 66
Loc: nebulon 1
Last seen: 14 years, 15 days
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Shea25]
#12272294 - 03/25/10 07:47 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
Shea25 said: Lol I'm glad you bought that up. Here are two cakes 200mls of sub, each yielded about 10 grams dry each first flush
After each cake has flushed Im talking 14+ grams dry per 200 mls of sub
Find any other sub that will do that CUP FOR CUP
You wont, Casing cakes is a waste
son a bitch haha, the golden teachers (2nd batch) cakes are in fact higher yield then the trays. but in retrospect the fruited trays are bigger in density and size. more or less there is a trade off between cased and caked, caked being yield but takes away the volume in which to fruit, cased on the other hand gives more volume to growth meaning bigger fruits. pros and cons.
still doesnt mean everyone should follow what you do, everyone cultivates the way that they see fit. if something works use it, if it works for you dont change it, I'm used to the yields and patterns of bulk casing cultivation rather than cakes, its all personal preference.
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Damion5050
Mush Doctor
Registered: 05/01/08
Posts: 12,493
Loc: Lost In Translation !
Last seen: 3 years, 2 months
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: creepyviking]
#12272474 - 03/25/10 08:19 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Now lets see what I can come up with !!! Please feel free to skip it if you want to lol. These numbers are based off of my normal yields.
Well if 1 cup of brf weighs roughly 120grams. and I can get on average of 8-12 grams dry.
Lets do math.
453 grams per pound diveded by 120 grams per cake = 3.7 cakes = 1 pound of substrate.
So 3.7 cakes times 8-12 grams dry = 29.6-44.4 grams of dry mushrooms per pound of brf substrate.
Now lets take a brick of coir for example expanded out to roughly 12 pounds of total weight.
9-12 ounces dry or 252-336 grams. So 252-336 grams of product per 12 pounds of substrate. That is 21 to 28 grams per pound of substrate
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Shea25
Just some guy
Registered: 01/27/09
Posts: 7,772
Loc: Westcoast Canada
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: creepyviking]
#12272511 - 03/25/10 08:24 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Shea25
Just some guy
Registered: 01/27/09
Posts: 7,772
Loc: Westcoast Canada
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Damion5050]
#12272523 - 03/25/10 08:25 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
Damion5050 said: Now lets see what I can come up with !!! Please feel free to skip it if you want to lol. These numbers are based off of my normal yields.
Well if 1 cup of brf weighs roughly 120grams. and I can get on average of 8-12 grams dry.
Lets do math.
453 grams per pound diveded by 120 grams per cake = 3.7 cakes = 1 pound of substrate.
So 3.7 cakes times 8-12 grams dry = 29.6-44.4 grams of dry mushrooms per pound of brf substrate.
Now lets take a brick of coir for example expanded out to roughly 12 pounds of total weight.
9-12 ounces dry or 252-336 grams. So 252-336 grams of product per 12 pounds of substrate. That is 21 to 28 grams per pound of substrate
Man if you only get 3.7 grams dry per cake then something is wrong
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Damion5050
Mush Doctor
Registered: 05/01/08
Posts: 12,493
Loc: Lost In Translation !
Last seen: 3 years, 2 months
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Shea25]
#12272537 - 03/25/10 08:27 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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No no u misread 3.7 cakes = 1 pound of BRF..
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Damion5050
Mush Doctor
Registered: 05/01/08
Posts: 12,493
Loc: Lost In Translation !
Last seen: 3 years, 2 months
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Damion5050]
#12272540 - 03/25/10 08:28 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Read through it slowly to understand it lol
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Shea25
Just some guy
Registered: 01/27/09
Posts: 7,772
Loc: Westcoast Canada
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Damion5050]
#12272544 - 03/25/10 08:28 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Ah, sorry lol that's what you get for skimming over text quickly.
I do understand now that I have read it
Edited by Shea25 (03/25/10 08:29 PM)
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Doc_T
Random Dude
Registered: 03/06/09
Posts: 42,395
Loc: Colorado
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Damion5050]
#12272550 - 03/25/10 08:29 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Seems like this discussion happens about once a week
-------------------- You make it all possible. Doesn't it feel good?
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Damion5050
Mush Doctor
Registered: 05/01/08
Posts: 12,493
Loc: Lost In Translation !
Last seen: 3 years, 2 months
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Shea25]
#12272551 - 03/25/10 08:29 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
Shea25 said: Ah, sorry lol that's what you get for skimming over text quickly
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Damion5050
Mush Doctor
Registered: 05/01/08
Posts: 12,493
Loc: Lost In Translation !
Last seen: 3 years, 2 months
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Doc_T]
#12272559 - 03/25/10 08:30 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
Doc_T said: Seems like this discussion happens about once a week
Hey at least we will all get good at talking about cakes. If u notice we get the same wave of questions all the time by new people every other week or so.. It is what it is.
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Shea25
Just some guy
Registered: 01/27/09
Posts: 7,772
Loc: Westcoast Canada
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Re: Store bought mushroom compost hypothesis and testing, [Re: Damion5050]
#12272566 - 03/25/10 08:30 PM (14 years, 26 days ago) |
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Quote:
Damion5050 said:
Quote:
Doc_T said: Seems like this discussion happens about once a week
Hey at least we will all get good at talking about cakes. If u notice we get the same wave of questions all the time by new people every other week or so.. It is what it is.
Quite True
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