Mycelium - Inoculum - Spores
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➡️ Do you want to create your own wild mushroom garden?
Try to do it using our mushroom inoculums, mycelia in grain and pellet form or any of our spores or support substrates.
In the mushroom cultivation section of La Casa de las Setas you will find all the products you will need to create your mycological garden. Discover all the varieties of mushrooms that you can grow using our products.
➡️ What varieties of mushrooms can I grow using inoculum, mycelium or spores?
Not all wild mushrooms can be grown using these techniques. Although it must be said that in this sense, progress is being made by leaps and bounds. Surely in a short time we will be able to cultivate most of the most coveted and sought after edible mushrooms.
The varieties of wild mushrooms that can be cultivated are:
Boletus edulis, Boletus pinophilus, Boletus aereus, Calocibe gambosa, Lactarius deliciosus, Tuber melanosporum, Cantharellus cibarius
The varieties of cultivated mushrooms are:
Oyster mushroom, oyster mushroom, yellow oyster mushroom, shiitake, poplar mushroom, Paris mushroom, Maitake, lions mane, reishi, turkey tail
➡️ What types of cultivation can I use to harvest wild mushrooms?
To grow wild mushrooms, we can do it in 2 main ways, by planting or by making supports on existing plants.
The first is to plant mycorrhizal plants. In our section of mycorrhizated plants and trees you will find different varieties of wild trees and plants: junipers, beeches, oaks, cistus... Also all species of mycorrhizal pines so that in a few years you can harvest your own chanterelles
If we choose to support native or already adult plants, the options are varied: inoculating substrates, mycorrhizal inoculums, sporal solutions, ...
Mycological culture support using inoculating substrates
We make "well" type holes around the tree, where we introduce the incolunate substrate. In this way we will give the possibility to inoculate trees that are not mycorrhized. These substrates must be associated with a tree to achieve symbiosis.
Spore solutions
We will provide the spores (seeds), both when we collect the mushrooms and when we want to put the tree into production. It is important to provide organic matter covering about 2 cm of the soil to the measure of the circle of the tree crown.
What is the mycorrhizal inoculum?
The mycorrhizal inoculum is a gel composed of spores and mycelial propagules of the fungus, which is applied on the absorbing roots of the tree for the formation of mycorrhizae, leading to the production of mushrooms. Inoculation should be carried out in the SPRING and AUTUMN months
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