Tag Archives: Mushroom News

Montana Mushrooms 2010

We are going to grow some mushrooms in 2010.

After getting a taste of this mushroom growing thing, I am hooked. I will always love to hunt for wild mushrooms, but they are unpredictable and impossible to control. The best way to insure you will actually get to harvest mushrooms is to grow them.Not only that, but you will have control of the growing conditions. We would like to think that our mushroom picking spots are pristine, but lets face it, there are very few wild places that you can guarantee have not been contaminated.

Another great thing about growing is that you can control the watering and take a big variable out of the picture. The rain does not always cooperate. By watering at the right time and temperature you can greatly increase your chances for a successful harvest.

The other plus to growing is that you get to control the volume and variety of different strains and types of mushrooms. There is a growing number of varieties and products for growing out doors available. I like to find mushrooms I like, and transplant them to my yard or a place close by for easy access. This also insures that you will be able to pick this particular mushroom if your spot becomes a parking lot or a subdivision. A simple thing like a change of ownership can legally close you out of you favorite spot.

I like to spread fungus wherever I can. Whether it is whole mushrooms, cut off stems, or just spreading spores whenever I can. Mushroom kits that have been flushed out are reused and spread all over again and again. Let the mushroom decide where it wants to grow. Mushroom scraps from picking or pieces from the kitchen are never thrown away. They go in the yard or in the compost bin. Unless that is, I have a secret spot scouted out  where I think they will grow.

Happy New Year

Happy New Year to  all of my fungal friends! It was a great year for mushrooms, and I am looking forward to another great year ahead.

The wild mushrooms were thick in the fall this year. The conditions  provided some large quantities of mushrooms, that are normally difficult to find.

We started out in the spring with oyster mushrooms on cottonwoods. They were plentiful, and a delicious way to start the season. My grandsons and I picked a couple of grocery sacks full on one picking adventure.

There were some morels, shortly after that.  I found enough to satisfy my craving,  before the general public found out they were flushing. The picking got competitive after that!

The chanterelles were a special, and at times, unbelievable treat this year. Seasoned pickers said it was the best flush in 15 years. They were plentiful and easy to find.

And if that wasn’t enough, there were boletes as big as your head to be had. Rounding that out with hedge hogs, tree ears,  and various edibles…it was a good year for wild mushrooms !

We will talk about mushroom growing projects from 2009 next!

Attention Mushroom Farmers!

Mushroom growers and farmers…now is probably our last chance to complete fall projects for spring flushes! I still have some plugs to put in logs and will get them completed soon. From what the mushroom growing literature says, October is the last month to inoculate outdoor projects in this area.

I will make sure my mushroom beds have have plenty of cover and are well watered. The Garden Giant mushroom bed has not flushed yet, although I know the mycelium is distributed throughout the wood chips. It will flush next spring when waterd well, unless I get a surprise flush before then! The Oysters continue to flush off and on from the coffee grounds, mushroom bed with woodchips and they even flush out of the bottum of my compost bin.

Garden Giant Mushroom BedMushroom Bed Closeup

Oyster Mushroom BedOyster Mushroom Bed

So if you are like me, you have to get these things in order before the snow REALLY settles in.