100 King Oyster Mushroom Plug Spawn to Grow Gourmet Medicinal Mushrooms at Home
100 King Oyster Mushroom Plug Spawn to Grow Gourmet Medicinal Mushrooms at Home
- no special lab equipment needed. Just freshly cut hardwood, a drill, and a hammer.
- Grow your own delicious and nutritious gourmet and medicinal mushrooms at home.
- Engage your children and other family members in a project that will fascinate and entertain.
- Makes a unique gift for friends or family. Instructions are included in this listing and provided with the product.
- Save on costs compared to grocery store or farmer's market.
Easily grow your own King Oyster Mushroom mushrooms for years to come. King Oyster Mushroom Plug Spawn is wood dowels inoculated with the King Oyster Mushroom mushroom species mycelium, and used to grow King Oyster Mushroom mushrooms on freshly cut logs or stumps. You will specifically need hardwood logs such as Alder, Ash, Birch, Bitternut, Cherry, Chestnut, Hophornbeam, Ironwood, Maple, Oak, Pecan, Sweet gum, Sycamore, Tulip poplar, Walnut, Willow and others. King Oyster Mushroom mushrooms do not grow on conifers. Simply drill 5/16" holes 1" deep to hammer the King Oyster Mushroom plugs into. The holes should be drilled right before plugging them, and spaced about 4" apart. Logs should be roughly 6 inches in diameter and four feet long. They need to be freshly cut, or at least cut within the past 20 days. Avoid using logs with missing or split bark, try to find unpenetrated logs, except on the sides they were cut. King Oyster Mushroom Plug spawn can also be used to grow mushrooms on live trees, but should only be done strategically down branch where pruning is planned later. Our King Oyster Mushroom plug spawn is made from hardwood fluted or spiral dowels. King Oyster Mushroom is the largest species in the oyster mushroom. It has a thick, meaty white stem and a small tan cap (in young specimens). Its natural range extends from the Atlantic Ocean through the Mediterranean Basin and Central Europe into Western Asia and India. Unlike other species of Pleurotus, which are primarily wood-decay fungi, the P. eryngii complex are also weak parasites on the roots of herbaceous plants, although they may also be cultured on organic wastes.
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