Psilocybe Subaeruginosa grow

Smokinr33

Well-Known Member
You pictures... They lookin' fried, mayun.
What are You using for moisture and fae ?

Have You done this before ?
Not sure what you mean but no i havent done this before im just following what ive seen online for this type of shroom. Can you explain your meaning of fried.
 

seedy420

Member
Im gonna keep an eye on this, its been a few years but I really wanna get somethin goin and ur getin me psyched up seein mushrooms growing again. I was doing the psilocybin cubensis
 

HeatlessBBQ

Well-Known Member
Not sure what you mean but no i havent done this before im just following what ive seen online for this type of shroom. Can you explain your meaning of fried.
Mushrooms enjoy water, let's just say that.

Soaked and misted perlite is a great way to keep the humidity up.
 

Smokinr33

Well-Known Member
These shrooms are abit different from the usual cubensis and ive been told are very hard to grow indoors so im leaving the container outdoors since its shroom season here so im leaving it upto nature to keep it humid but also you cant see it in pics but theres heaps of moisture on the soil enough that when i tip it on the side i see water coming out so i made a few drainage holes for when it rains but eother way they growing so fast yesterday i couldnt see any caps forming but today i checked and they shrooms have small caps (pins) and a nicely forming stalks
 

iHearAll

Well-Known Member
No idea its just outside most days we uave a frost too or a heavy fog so its perfect for this variety of shroom
yea thats all i wanted to hear lol

I thought they were a cold loving variety and was shocked to see you fruiting them in June but i suppose that's the difference in hemisphere eh?

anyway, great thread! really enjoying watching this
 

Smokinr33

Well-Known Member
yea thats all i wanted to hear lol

I thought they were a cold loving variety and was shocked to see you fruiting them in June but i suppose that's the difference in hemisphere eh?

anyway, great thread! really enjoying watching this
Haha thanx ill keep you posted with more pics and maybe even a trip report
 

iHearAll

Well-Known Member
Your choice of substrate baffles Me.
They aren't cubensis, they thrive in forest floors where branches fall and become crushed. The mushroom typically is seen growing wood in the wild so to replicate the forest floor, leaves/peaty substances are the source of water retention. They can fight contamination really well since most other completion from molds and fungi can't thrive on hardwood.

Cubensis will probably be capable living there as well since they are known to be leaf compost lovers as well as almost every other substrate imaginable. Cubes are an interesting organism to say the least.
 
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