Check out this guys myco fungi research at Rodale Instititues experimental 333 acre farm and then holla at ya boi
Cut your costs of myco to under 1% while diversifying the species profile, increasing disease resistance, soil structure and water relations (tell me bout da fresh glomalin, mon)
http://newfarm.rodaleinstitute.org/depts/NFfield_trials/0903/daviddouds.shtml
-heres's 2 quick examples from the article :
1) Build your own on-farm inoculum production system
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"A myccorhizae factory: The basic procedure is for the farmer to construct a simple enclosure out of landscape fabric, fill it with a mixture of compost and vermiculite, and then transplant pre-colonized
bahiagrass seedlings into the mixture. Over the course of the growing season the bahiagrass spreads within the enclosure and the mycorrhizal fungi spread and
reproduce along with it. When the grass dies back in the winter, the farmer is left with a concentrated mycorrhizal inoculant that can be incorporated into his or her potting mix when starting seedlings in the greenhouse the following spring."
2) do I need to say more?
It increases da yields of potatoes 50%, peppers 34% and herbs, who knows!?
who wants to do a side by side experiment !