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bigidiot
Stranger

Registered: 01/10/01
Posts: 1,153
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Post deleted by Moe Howard
#484201 - 12/08/01 03:38 PM (21 years, 9 months ago) |
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fuzzysquirelnuts
veteran
Registered: 06/22/01
Posts: 1,150
Loc: souhwest us
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Re: do pan cyans really need different substrate? [Re: bigidiot]
#484213 - 12/08/01 04:01 PM (21 years, 9 months ago) |
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Eric's Guide to Cultivating Psilocybe Azurescens/Cyanescens....youre talking about two completely seperate things(pan. cyanscens vers. psi. cyanscens/azurescens) Psilocybe Azurescens/Cyanescens like hardwood substartes and pan. cyanscens like dung based substrates
-------------------- were all retarded sometimes
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fuzzysquirelnuts
veteran
Registered: 06/22/01
Posts: 1,150
Loc: souhwest us
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Re: do pan cyans really need different substrate? [Re: fuzzysquirelnuts]
#484215 - 12/08/01 04:02 PM (21 years, 9 months ago) |
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did that clear up your questions??
-------------------- were all retarded sometimes
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fuzzysquirelnuts
veteran
Registered: 06/22/01
Posts: 1,150
Loc: souhwest us
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Re: do pan cyans really need different substrate? [Re: fuzzysquirelnuts]
#484219 - 12/08/01 04:03 PM (21 years, 9 months ago) |
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did you even have a question???
-------------------- were all retarded sometimes
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Anonymous
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Re: do pan cyans really need different substrate? [Re: bigidiot]
#484273 - 12/08/01 05:02 PM (21 years, 9 months ago) |
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Anonymous
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Re: do pan cyans really need different substrate? [Re: bigidiot]
#484540 - 12/08/01 10:09 PM (21 years, 9 months ago) |
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Coplandia cyanescens ( Pan. cyanescens) are a different species then Psilocybe cyanescens and Psilocybe azurescens. The link you gave is for Psilocybe cyanescens and Psilocybe azurescens cultivation. The P. azurescens has been extremely difficult, almost impossible to cultivate indoors for everyone. The P. cyanescens is extremely difficult for most everyone. Both of these seem to need a wood substrate and a very cold humid climate to fruit. Cop. cyanescens is on the opposite side of the spectrum. It is a warm weather species, and is very easy to cultivate indoors. Manure substrate is not entirely necessary, but it does increase size of the mushrooms, as does straw. Straw is more prone to contaminate with all species, then manure based substrates. They do grow on straight rye grain, and straight millet, and probably alot of other substrates, they just don't grow as well as the manure or the straw. P.S. the link is good for cultivating the mycelium, but has not been proven to be effective for indoor fruiting. No pictures to back it up. Alot of really experience cultivators have failed at fruiting them indoors. But by all means please give it a try, someone has to eventually get it right with the azures indoors.
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