DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 1104 Joined: 11-Feb-2017 Last visit: 18-Jan-2021
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My 6th monotub attemp seems to fail again. The mycelium always colonizes the bulk substrate almost completely and then stalls. The substrate is coir, verm, horse poo, peat moss and some gypsum. The grain was inoculated from LC on 12/14, spawned on 1/5 and placed in fruiting chamber on 1/12. The temparature is around 20 C (68 F) with constant 90-95% RH. The substrate now seems to be consolidating, there were lots of rhizomorphic growth but a cotton-like plaque appeared during the last weeek. It does not smell bad, there is a mushroom smell but it is weak and somewhat stale smell making me afraid there is some mould present. I am afraid there is a mould contamination though it looked perfect and fully colonized two weeks ago. I am not sure what am I doing wrong. Maybe spawning to pasteurized substrate in the kitchen is a bad idea and more sterile conditions are needed? Or maybe too little hpoo? Too much hpoo? blue.magic attached the following image(s): IMG_20180121_130717.jpg (193kb) downloaded 217 time(s). IMG_20180121_130723.jpg (238kb) downloaded 213 time(s). IMG_20180121_130729.jpg (177kb) downloaded 212 time(s).
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 804 Joined: 27-Feb-2016 Last visit: 17-Aug-2024
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The white bit of the substrate is fine. The bit of yellow to the right of the image might be concerning, but it wouldn't cause the whole tray to stall. The white cottony will pull together to form pins, in fact I see some. The temp is a little cool, but it should still fruit. Albeit more slowly. You might have issues with fresh air exchange. What is the setup of your fruiting chamber like? Regardless of all the parameters cubensis should still fruit anyway when all the substrate is colonised. The nearest we ever come to knowing truth is when we are witness to paradox.
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 13 Joined: 09-Dec-2013 Last visit: 13-Feb-2021 Location: US
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That tray looks just fine to me. It looks fully colonized and nine days is not too long to wait for pins.
The yellow liquid you are seeing is just mushroom metabolite and it's normal to see a small amount. You can dab it away gently with a clean dry paper towel.
Keep doing what you're doing and don't forget to give it fresh air 3-5 times a day, and you will hopefully see pins soon!
Spawning in the kitchen is fine as long as you don't have a garbage can full of rotting food right next to it. It's always a good idea to clean up, wipe down surfaces, and maybe turn off your A/C or heat before getting started so they aren't blowing contaminants around.
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 1104 Joined: 11-Feb-2017 Last visit: 18-Jan-2021
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Thanks for the info guys. Northerner wrote:The temp is a little cool, but it should still fruit. Albeit more slowly. I can turn on a large heat pad below the monotub, controlled by a thermostat. People told me heating is unnecessary and can promote drying, so I turned it off. But maybe it's better to heat it a little. Sidestreet wrote:Keep doing what you're doing and don't forget to give it fresh air 3-5 times a day, and you will hopefully see pins soon! Unfortunately I don't have so much time, so I adopted the "set and forget" style people have with monotubs. That's one reason I am switching to monotubs - no need to harvest cakes every other day, just one big flush once in a while. The mini-monotubs are placed in a bigger plastic tray, having 4 larger holes (approx 4 cm diameter) covered with micropore tape and many small holes (approx 6 mm diameter) on the bottom as a CO2 outlet. The bigger tray will be used as a monotub after the small ones will prove themselves working. There is 6500K fluorescent tube on a 12/12 regime. Sidestreet wrote:It's always a good idea to clean up, wipe down surfaces, and maybe turn off your A/C or heat before getting started so they aren't blowing contaminants around. Yes. I use 10% bleach solution and the substrate containers where wiped with IPA.
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 291 Joined: 12-Jan-2016 Last visit: 24-Jan-2021 Location: here and now boys, here and now
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Patience... You might be surprised to see little mushrooms popping up any day now. Your sub looks pretty good maybe a little more fresh air but otherwise I would just wait! реР рдЕрд╕рддреЛ рдорд╛ рд╕рджреНрдЧрдордп ред рддрдорд╕реЛ рдорд╛ рдЬреНрдпреЛрддрд┐рд░реНрдЧрдордп ред рдореГрддреНрдпреЛрд░реНрдорд╛ рдЕрдореГрддрдВ рдЧрдордп ред
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 13 Joined: 09-Dec-2013 Last visit: 13-Feb-2021 Location: US
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blue.magic wrote:
Yes. I use 10% bleach solution and the substrate containers where wiped with IPA.
Sweet! Which IPA did you use? Founders? Lagunitas? Dogfish Head? Sorry, couldn't help myself. It sounds like you're doing everything right, but I would still give it the occasional manual fanning. If your humidity is that high it can't hurt. I'd bet that the micropore tape you're using is great for keeping out any contamination but probably doesn't let much fresh air in. I'm not for sure though, I've never actually used it. I do know that the CO2 will have a hard time leaving if there isn't much air coming in.
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 804 Joined: 27-Feb-2016 Last visit: 17-Aug-2024
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blue.magic wrote:Northerner wrote:The temp is a little cool, but it should still fruit. Albeit more slowly. I can turn on a large heat pad below the monotub, controlled by a thermostat. People told me heating is unnecessary and can promote drying, so I turned it off. But maybe it's better to heat it a little. Yeah, people told you right mate. If you are in a cool place you can heat the air in the room, but NOT place a heating pad under the substrate. 22c is optimal iirc. Sidestreet wrote:Keep doing what you're doing and don't forget to give it fresh air 3-5 times a day, and you will hopefully see pins soon! Yeah, it looks like it will come along okay. blue.magic wrote:Unfortunately I don't have so much time, so I adopted the "set and forget" style people have with monotubs. That's one reason I am switching to monotubs - no need to harvest cakes every other day, just one big flush once in a while.
The mini-monotubs are placed in a bigger plastic tray, having 4 larger holes (approx 4 cm diameter) covered with micropore tape and many small holes (approx 6 mm diameter) on the bottom as a CO2 outlet. The bigger tray will be used as a monotub after the small ones will prove themselves working.
Is this a new tek/design? When I have made monos/mini monos I always spawn straight into the fruiting chamber. There are 2 holes on each of the long sides, right at the substrate line and 1 on each of the short sides up high. They then are stuffed with polyfil or covered with compressed polyfil. The bottom one's are tighter than the top ones. Creates a mini greenhouse and the air is exchanged from top to bottom, so the carbon dioxide is sucked out right off the substrate surface and the fresh air flow is slow but constant. Sidestreet wrote:The yellow liquid you are seeing is just mushroom metabolite and it's normal to see a small amount. You can dab it away gently with a clean dry paper towel.
This an enzyme that the myc uses to fight infections. Mushroom antibody if you will. So it's good to keep an eye on it if it's pooling in one particular area. The nearest we ever come to knowing truth is when we are witness to paradox.
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 1104 Joined: 11-Feb-2017 Last visit: 18-Jan-2021
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Sidestreet wrote:It sounds like you're doing everything right, but I would still give it the occasional manual fanning. If your humidity is that high it can't hurt. I'd bet that the micropore tape you're using is great for keeping out any contamination but probably doesn't let much fresh air in. Okay this is the part I don't understand: Why bother will all the disinfection, polyfill and filters at all, when we basically crack open the monotub several times a day, fanning it with dirty air? I will replace the micropore with some loose filter (time to destroy a pillow). The micropore tape seems to restrict airflow as I see with my stalled jars. I tried to avoid polyfill as its bulky and traps water droplets. Northerner wrote:If you are in a cool place you can heat the air in the room, but NOT place a heating pad under the substrate. 22c is optimal iirc. Unfortunately the room with mushrooms is the same one where I store volatile chemicals, including DCM, so I try to avoid larger heat sources there. Maybe 22c is still okay. I will look for a cheap heater that will sit on the other side of the room. It's just a tiny storage room so heating it should be fine...
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 13 Joined: 09-Dec-2013 Last visit: 13-Feb-2021 Location: US
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Quote:Okay this is the part I don't understand: Why bother will all the disinfection, polyfill and filters at all, when we basically crack open the monotub several times a day, fanning it with dirty air?
I will replace the micropore with some loose filter (time to destroy a pillow). The micropore tape seems to restrict airflow as I see with my stalled jars. I tried to avoid polyfill as its bulky and traps water droplets. I can see how using filters will reduce the exposure to the air in your room. If you really wanted to protect your tubs you could even spawn them in a sterile environment. A well-pasteurized substrate doesn't need all that protection though, and a fully colonized one definitely doesn't. When I used tubs with polyfil, it was more about automation of the type you're getting dialed in. Even when I was using polyfil, though, I still had a fan running on a timer a few times a day to promote air exchange. And don't destroy your pillows! Especially if you are concerned about cleanliness, get a new bag of polyfil. Pillows are full of mites and skin flakes.
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 4612 Joined: 17-Jan-2009 Last visit: 07-Mar-2024
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Sidestreet wrote:Quote:Okay this is the part I don't understand: Why bother will all the disinfection, polyfill and filters at all, when we basically crack open the monotub several times a day, fanning it with dirty air?
I will replace the micropore with some loose filter (time to destroy a pillow). The micropore tape seems to restrict airflow as I see with my stalled jars. I tried to avoid polyfill as its bulky and traps water droplets. I can see how using filters will reduce the exposure to the air in your room. If you really wanted to protect your tubs you could even spawn them in a sterile environment. A well-pasteurized substrate doesn't need all that protection though, and a fully colonized one definitely doesn't. I agree with what Sidestreet said above in quote, especially the last 2 sentences there. Also I agree with Northerner, 68F is a bit cool. Mines always been between 72-76F. I use a pillar-style electric heater, set the room temp, it reads the room temp and goes on/off depending. Never had issues. Not saying you can't do things at 68F but I'd imagine it's going to slow down a bit when things are done around that temp. 22c should do alright. If it was me though personally I'd try to keep the temperature around 73-76F. Probably just my own personal preference, but that temperature range has never failed me - bulk, pf jars, etc [in terms of speed, pin formation, and fruiting].
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 64 Joined: 19-Jun-2016 Last visit: 14-Nov-2024 Location: United States
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Looks fine to me! The long fruiting time is probably due to your colder temps, I grow within the same range and it takes a little longer than in the summer. I have found a casing layer helps a lot during the cold/dry seasons. Also have found that in the winter you might have to list and fan a lot more (used to never do this at all) in order to initiate a pin set. The reason that we wipe the tub down with ipa before spawning is because before it reaches full colonization, the bulk sub is vulnerable to competitor fungi, but once the p.cube myc takes hold it has its own defenses against contaminants. Rick Sanchez is a fictional character. Anything said by Rick Sanchez is not representative of any real life events whatsoever.All posts should be regarded as fictional occurrences in imaginary dimensions.
Everything exists some of the time but nothing exists all the time.
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 1104 Joined: 11-Feb-2017 Last visit: 18-Jan-2021
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I see, thanks. It makes sense. So the tub just started fruiting I took about 10 days more than it "should" but that's, as you say, probably due to colder weather.
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Boundary condition
Posts: 8617 Joined: 30-Aug-2008 Last visit: 07-Nov-2024 Location: square root of minus one
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blue.magic wrote:So the tub just started fruiting Pics! Pics!! тАЬThere is a way of manipulating matter and energy so as to produce what modern scientists call 'a field of force'. The field acts on the observer and puts him in a privileged position vis-à-vis the universe. From this position he has access to the realities which are ordinarily hidden from us by time and space, matter and energy. This is what we call the Great Work." тАХ Jacques Bergier, quoting Fulcanelli
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 1104 Joined: 11-Feb-2017 Last visit: 18-Jan-2021
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downwardsfromzero wrote:blue.magic wrote:So the tub just started fruiting Pics! Pics!! Here you go blue.magic attached the following image(s): IMG_20180126_224815.jpg (83kb) downloaded 88 time(s). IMG_20180126_224858.jpg (97kb) downloaded 87 time(s). IMG_20180126_224912.jpg (89kb) downloaded 87 time(s).
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 4612 Joined: 17-Jan-2009 Last visit: 07-Mar-2024
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Booya! Just needed a bit of time Lookin good so far
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Boundary condition
Posts: 8617 Joined: 30-Aug-2008 Last visit: 07-Nov-2024 Location: square root of minus one
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<rubs hands in anticipation> тАЬThere is a way of manipulating matter and energy so as to produce what modern scientists call 'a field of force'. The field acts on the observer and puts him in a privileged position vis-à-vis the universe. From this position he has access to the realities which are ordinarily hidden from us by time and space, matter and energy. This is what we call the Great Work." тАХ Jacques Bergier, quoting Fulcanelli
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 291 Joined: 12-Jan-2016 Last visit: 24-Jan-2021 Location: here and now boys, here and now
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That monster on the side in the last pic... реР рдЕрд╕рддреЛ рдорд╛ рд╕рджреНрдЧрдордп ред рддрдорд╕реЛ рдорд╛ рдЬреНрдпреЛрддрд┐рд░реНрдЧрдордп ред рдореГрддреНрдпреЛрд░реНрдорд╛ рдЕрдореГрддрдВ рдЧрдордп ред
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тЭдя╕ПтАН🔥
Posts: 3648 Joined: 11-Mar-2017 Last visit: 25-Nov-2024 Location: 🌎
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Looks good, bit why two blocks? The entire tub should be filled with substrate for what I understand as a monotub.
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DMT-Nexus member
Posts: 1104 Joined: 11-Feb-2017 Last visit: 18-Jan-2021
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Loveall wrote:Looks good, bit why two blocks? The entire tub should be filled with substrate for what I understand as a monotub. Because these are one of several experimental mini monotubs. I made six such mini tubs in total to find a working recipe for the large monotub. All this hassle with mini monotubs is because I have only compressed horse manure pellets and don't know how to translate pellet weight to real horse manure weight (I can't find any reliable recipe for pellets - everyone refers to either US or UK-specific brands or plain dried manure). ...so I have to experiment with tiny boxes - better lose few tiny ones than a big one.
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тЭдя╕ПтАН🔥
Posts: 3648 Joined: 11-Mar-2017 Last visit: 25-Nov-2024 Location: 🌎
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Ok I think I got it. The way the individual containers look in post #1 there may be pooling of the heavier CO2. Did you poker holes at the mycelium line to avoid this? If not the different gas flow vs classic monotub will skew your experiments. Then in the last picks the blocks look like they are outside of the individual containers (birthed) so they would be getting the typical passive air exchange from the monotub double row holes. Did you notice a shift in behaviour after birthing? I hope I'm interpreting the pictures correctly, otherwise I won't be making any sense. Also, the composted cow manure in many recipes comes with typically 35% water weight. That should allow to "translate" the recipes to your case. I'm curious if the experiments would support that.
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