Mycology
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Wolfs milk growing in vegetable garden is the food safe to eat?
I have recently had Wolfs milk start growing in the soil in my vegetable garden and was wondering if I would have to get rid of the soil and start over or if the food is still safe to eat. I tried to search what would happen if accidentally ingesting the slime mold but could not find any answers online.
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King oyster mushrooms starting in the tub 4 days ago, there's mold fluff balls all through the hardwood and bran mix already. Will the mycelium be okay fighting through it? I feel like mold with this
King oyster mushrooms starting in the tub 4 days ago, there's mold fluff balls all through the hardwood and bran mix already. Will the mycelium be okay fighting through it? I feel like mold with this is unavoidable, but there's a lot of it so I'm concerned.
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Suillellus luridus aka lurid bolete. So. Many!
Sadly, 95% were full of maggots. Could've gathered kilos!
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Cutting corners is alideen
New to the hobby
So about a month ago I innoculated 6 wholegrain uncle Ben's rice packets with king oyster mushroom liquid culture. But instead of cutting the packets' corners like every guide says to, I followed a random comment's advice to simply poke the syringe through the packet and cover the syringe hole with micropore tape. A week later I had a try with making a few grain jars using the same liquid culture.
Fast forward to today, and my grain jars are ready to use, yet the rice packets look and feel unchanged. I suspect the poor gas exchange from a tiny syringe hole caused the mycelium to suffocate. I'll have to try going back to those packets and do it properly this time.
So I guess I'm posting to say don't try to cut corners, and instead you should cut corners ✂️
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A desert fungus that infects humans is spreading
YouTube Video
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Out of the millions of fungal species in the world, only a few hundred can make people sick. Coccidioides is one of them — and it lives in desert dust. Microscopic spores are kicked up when the ground is disturbed; if inhaled, they can cause an infection known as Valley fever. Most people recover without ever knowing they had it, but others will experience far more intense symptoms, ranging from pneumonia to meningitis. Coccidioides is also really good at eating … meat.