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theshiftingwalls
Divine state

Registered: 06/18/03
Posts: 4,128
Loc: Residing in thee Universa...
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Re: Psilocybe cyanescens cultivation [Re: micro]
#1791991 - 08/08/03 11:51 AM (20 years, 5 months ago) |
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Then your troubles are fixed.
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SirHaze
Stranger
Registered: 07/23/03
Posts: 6
Last seen: 19 years, 2 days
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is a UV light like this enough to sterilize air.
theshiftingwalls how do you plan to use/install the UV light?
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Sev
Astropath
Registered: 06/06/03
Posts: 1,426
Loc: NY
Last seen: 9 years, 3 months
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Re: Psilocybe cyanescens cultivation [Re: SirHaze]
#1793011 - 08/08/03 04:56 PM (20 years, 5 months ago) |
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I use those (or the repti-lite by Zoomed, which are the exact same bulbs) for my iguana.
-------------------- "Do we want the stars? We can have them. Can we borrow cups of fire from the sun? We can and must and light the world." --"On the Shoulders of Giants", Ray Bradbury All of my posts are full of fiction and blatant lies.
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Tomandjerry58
Stranger
Registered: 01/27/03
Posts: 5,212
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Re: Psilocybe cyanescens cultivation [Re: Sev]
#1793269 - 08/08/03 06:00 PM (20 years, 5 months ago) |
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ive heard that this species runs real well on corrugated paper which most people have access too. I wonder if you were to shred some throw it in a jar innoc with a wedge. then colonize the alder chips. just an idea feel free to knock my idea. you would definitley need a good wood chipper which i have and probly a good flow hood with some synthetic filter dics and alot of trial and error.
Edited by Tomandjerry58 (08/08/03 06:03 PM)
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Zen Peddler


Registered: 06/18/01
Posts: 6,379
Loc: orbit
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Re: Psilocybe cyanescens cultivation [Re: Tomandjerry58]
#1794530 - 08/09/03 02:19 AM (20 years, 5 months ago) |
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As long as you have a glove box for agar work, i dont think a flowhood is necessary - since in your example your using cardboard and alder chips which are more selective substrates. I managed to get cyanescens amd azures to run well on straight brf and millet and then used with to spawn pasterised beech chips (smoking chips so no wood-chipper required). They arent that difficult as long as your patient and it gets nice and cold in your winter. Fruiting them indoors might work, but i really dont see the point when they fruit well outside and require no running costs for expensive attempts to replicate this indoors. 'They might adapt to indoor conditions and fruit better if isolated indoors.' I think you mean cloned indoors - as in cloning a fruit body that fruited well indoors with the assumption that its substrain will fruit as well in the future in the same conditions. A print of this mushroom would have as diverse genetics as any previous generations not suited to indoor cultivation, and you would be starting from scratch if you isolate from a print of any mushroom. Good luck anyway..
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theshiftingwalls
Divine state

Registered: 06/18/03
Posts: 4,128
Loc: Residing in thee Universa...
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Re: Psilocybe cyanescens cultivation [Re: Zen Peddler]
#1794590 - 08/09/03 02:50 AM (20 years, 5 months ago) |
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Thanks Bluemeanie. I will clone the fruit body's with agar as you stated. Is there any one else who has an idea that will help azure fruit better? Also do they fruit better in a high pressure environment or low pressure?
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