Check out the photo of this first flush of EQ on oats, using shoebox tek.  What's so special about it?
This is EQ cloned from a 
dried specimen.  A shaman friend gave it to me.  It had been partially dried in front of a fan and then cracker dried in a box with desiccant.
This was the first dried tissue clone I ever attempted.  I've read dried tissue cloning can be tricky.  But I figured, why not try.  I sat in front of my flow hood with dried shroom and agar plates ready.  I snapped the base of the shroom to expose the sterile interior tissue and the stem exploded in my hand.  I didn't realize the stem was hollow.  Doh! 

In the aftermath of the explosion, in the debris, I spotted a little shard of dried mushroom with some fuzzy mycelium.  I figured it was surely contaminated because I don't think it stayed within the laminar flow of the flow hood.  But oh well - might as well try.  I do my work in a little powder room with a HEPA air cleaner running, so the surrounding air is fairly clean.  I scraped two samples of mycelium and placed on separate agar plates.  I didn't use peroxide, bleach, or sterile water or anything else to hydrate or clean the sample.
A month later, nothing.  Figured the experiment was a fail.  A couple more weeks and I see a dime-sized spot of new mycelium on each agar plate!  And no sign of bacterial or mold contamination.  The growth became faster and more vigorous over the subsequent month until I transferred slivers to new agar plates.  After further growth, I used a few bits of agar to inoculate a bag of oat grain.  That colonized normally and eventually lead to spawning in a couple shoeboxes with 50/50 coir/vermiculate in a 1:1 ratio with the spawn.  A couple weeks later and voila, now we have photos and a fun story to tell.  
 shroombee attached the following image(s):

 EQ Cloned from Dried Tissue - 2021-08-10.JPG 
(1,301kb) downloaded 57 time(s).