-40%
Seeds Brown Birch Bolete Mushroom Mycelium Spawn Substrat Dried Spores Ukraine
$ 5.25
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
WHY WE:·
PLANTING INSTRUCTIONS in ENGLISH
are included. The seed pack has LABELLED a color picture of the product.
·
WHAT YOU SEE (ON PICTURES) IS WHAT YOU GET (WHEN HARVESTING)!
·
100%
NON-GMO
genuine seeds.
·
More than
200 unique kinds of seeds.
CLICK HERE.
DESCRIPTION:
Leccinum scabrum, commonly known as the rough-stemmed bolete, scaber stalk, and birch bolete, is an edible mushroom in the family Boletaceae, and was formerly classified as Boletus scaber. The birch bolete is widespread in Europe, in the Himalayas in Asia, and elsewhere in the Northern Hemisphere, occurring only in mycorrhizal association with birch trees. It fruits from June to October. This mushroom is also becoming increasingly common in Australia and New Zealand where it is likely introduced.
Package includes about 100 seeds
HOW TO PLANT:
The preparation of seeds is the most important part of the planting process. The result depends on how you have prepared the seeds.
Mushrooms grow symbiotically with trees.
Rake the soil under a tree to form a hole of between 2-6 inches. Spread the mycelium evenly over the entire raked surface. Cover with backyard (or forest) soil mixed with any humus in equal proportion. Water with the watering can at the amount of 1 gallon per 5 ft2, sprinkling the ground that was formed during the raking. Cultivation can be done at any time of the year and under any tree species. During a dry period, watering should be done using a watering at the amount of 1 gallon per 2 ft2. Mushrooms appear from the spring to the fall but for the first time no earlier than 2.5 months after cultivation. The first harvest will be between 10-15 oz./ 10 ft2, and then up to 5-10 lbs./ 10 ft2. The mycelium will remain viable as long as the tree is alive.
Indoors, you can try to grow mushrooms in the same way, but the results will underperform those grown in the backyard. There is also an increased chance that the mushrooms will not germinate. Amateur cultivation of mycorrhizal and other soil mushrooms doesn’t give a guaranteed result as the harvest of mushrooms strongly depends on the weather and many other factors.
Attention! A significant factor for the successful cultivation of mushrooms is the acidity of the soil. The optimum pH is between 6.5 - 7.