@jomolhari, yes, true that! Actually it might be the reason. Last times I got mold I haven't used antibiotics ๐ค great advice, thank you! I'll try again better prepared ๐
@Girl_Scout, sometimes it seems to me that it is impossible to incubate them if an antibiotic has not been used. Any crap in the substrate will definitely turn sour and moldy. For a human these dosages are simply nothing (besides, they will disintegrate in such a time). I suspect that mushrooms in a store (oyster mushroom, for example) are grown only with the use of antibiotics. If you did not use antibiotics while preparing a substrate, then I assure you - this is the reason for failures. All glory to gentamicin ๐
@jomolhari, yes I did a few times, fucked it up half times as well to be honest ๐ couldn't achieve completely sterile conditions.. but the times I succeeded it was fully magical for sure! 3-4 waves of good harvest. I love the process, how fast they develop. I love plants as well I would just say it's different and a bit more usual for me
@@@@@@54degreesnorth, it is production of spore print. It's way of preserving biomaterial for further cycles.
In my case it's sterile piece of foil with spores on it (from a cap of shroom). Some shroomers use plastic or thick paper.
You can use spores print for making spore suspension. Spore suspension is not stored for a long, but prints can be kept in refrigerator for years (or probably centuries ๐).
It is instead of seeds in plants ๐ And unlike plants, the genotype remains stable. The next generation of mushrooms will be identical: F1, F2, F3, etc - all of them will be the same.