Trav suggested I put up some teks of how I do my mush, so, well here it begins.
I plan on putting a few seperate teks and splitting them up with as many pictures as I can take to help explain it as thorough as possible (I know we all love pics). Before starting, I must say that I have learned almost all of this at the shroomery (along with some help from Paul Stamets TMC, and RR's dvd
Let's Grow Mushrooms!). The majority of this tek is from
Let's Grow Mushrooms! (
Purchase "Let's Grow Mushrooms!". I am quite new to mycology as is so I may be doing somethings wrong (which I hope that someone more experienced would point out!). This is just how I do things, I'm here to learn so if you have any tips or advice please spread the wealth!
Pasteurization = Heat treatment applied to a Substrate to destroy unwanted organisms but keeping favourable ones alive. The temperature range is 60°C to 80°C(140°F-175°F). The treatment is very different from Sterilization, which aims at destroying all organisms in the Substrate (Shroomery glossary).
Sterilization = Completely destroying all micro organisms present, by heat(autoclave, pressure cooker) or chemicals. Spawn Substrate always has to be sterilized prior to Inoculation (Shroomery glossary).
Whether to pasteurize or sterilize your horse manure is debatable. Proponents of pasteurization say that if you sterilize your horse poo, the horse poo is more susceptible to the contaminant Trichoderma (aka green mold) and that it kills the beneficial bacteria. I pasteurize.
This first tek is how I pasteurize my horse manure substrate for my rye seed spawn. Here it goes...
Step 1. Get some Horse manure.I live in Oklahoma so we have lots of horse pastures here. All I did was go to a small family owned farm with a plastic bin and latex gloves and ask the owner if I could have some horse manure for composting a garden (not only did he say this was fine, he told me I could come by whenever I wanted). This is MUCH EASIER than you think. They won't to get rid of the horse poo anyways. So, not only are you getting free and amazing substrate, you are helping them out (this is assuming they don't sell their compost which is rare). If you live in a city with no horse pastures, I'm not sure what to tell you. You can use cow manure but horse manure is better. You can order manure some places but you lose the benefit of FREE substrate.
Step 2. Leech your Horse Manure.If you can get horse manure that is dry (it cracks when you squeeze it and has NO shit smell whatsoever), then you don't have to leech the poo yourself--as it has already been leeched. Leeching is getting rid of the ammonia in the fresh poo. When you get your horse manure, it will be in little 2 inch balls (it's really interesting looking imo). You want to break these up and make a soil like medium. My poo was moist but did not smell like shit when I got it so most of it had been leeched, but to make sure I put it on a black trash bag that I ripped, spread it on my car garage roof, sprayed it with water, let it dry out, sprayed it with water, let it dry out, etc. I did this for a week. The poo should smell like soil (again it should not smell like POO at all). It is getting cold out here so it didn't full dry, but it is fine since it was fully leeched and I would be adding water anyways. I threw some leeched horse poo on a tub lid and brought inside.
Step 3. Mix your Horse Manure with Vermiculite and GypsumHere is what I start with.
Verti Lome Vermiculte (big chunks)
Purchase Verti Lome VermiculiteLawn and Garden Gypsum (powder)
Purchase Lawn and Garden GypsumI get out my big home-made strainer (which is wire mesh secured to 4 pieces of pvc pipe with 4 corner fittings with small zip ties and covered with tape to try to prevent myself from poking my hands).
I throw my leeched horse poo onto it.
I eyeball and add about 5%-10% by volume gypsum.
I mix that up dry (it's harder to mix the gypsum in when its wet).
I then mix my chunky vermiculite in a seperate bowl (the verm sucks up the water better when soaked by itself prior to adding to horse manure + gypsum).
Dry verm.
Wetted verm.
I add about 10%-20% by volume wetted verm.
I mix that thoroughly.
Then I add water and soak the horse manure.
Wetted horse manure/10% vermiculite/5% gypsum.
Mixed.
You want the horse manure soaked to field capacity. Field capacity is when you pick up a handful and no water drips out.
Then when you squeeze lightly a few drops come out.
Then when you squeeze hard the water pours out and stops after a few seconds.
Step 4. Load jars up.I use wide mouth quart jars with foil lids.
Loosely fill jar.
Step 5. Heat jars up.Put jars in big pot. I use my AA921 pressure cooker with the lid off. I also put the lid rings, 2 layers, with 2 layers of heavy foil above them in the bottom so the jars are not directly touching the metal.
I add cold water (you want to use cold water as opposed to hot water so the jars heat up at the same time the water heats up) so the jars are 2/3's submerged in the water.
I put a metal diveder above the jars with a brick on top to weight them down (unnecessary but I just do it). I stick a meat thermometer through the foil of the middle one so it takes the temp of the horse manure in the center of the jar.
Turn on the heat on high.
When the thermometer reaches 140 Farenheit, I turn the heat off.
They will continue to heat up until they reach 170 Farenheit, and will sit at 170 for an hour or so.
I let them cool down, remove them from water and pressure cooker, and then add to trays. I will make another thread showing how I do this sometime.
Thats it. Once combined with your spawn of choice (I use rye), this is what you can get.
“I have realized that the past and future are real illusions, that they exist in the present, which is what there is and all there is.”
-Watts-
"We live together, we act on, and react to, one another; but always and in all circumstances we are by ourselves. The martyrs go hand in hand into the arena; they are crucified alone. Embraced, the lovers desperately try to fuse their insulated ecstasies into a single self-transcendence; in vain. By its very nature every embodied spirit is doomed to suffer and enjoy in solitude. Sensations, feelings, insights, fancies — all these are private and, except through symbols and at second hand, incommunicable. We can pool information about experiences, but never the experiences themselves. From family to nation, every human group is a society of island universes."
-Huxley-