And morels!
After I found those lovely morels in our garden, I found others, not half as lovely, even though prolific, on the grounds of the new buildings I live in - a space of the type I call green deserts: you see green plants and stuff, but there isn't a bird or insect in sight or earshot
Anyway, it was landscaped last October/beginning of November.
So, spurned by a conversation with
@iHearAll , I set out to see what soil, what plants were around them to, perhaps, find some consistent element that could help with trying to grow one's own.
Alas, I found I'm at way too basic a level, with amateur equipment and dubious sample preparation practices, to be able to really find out anything truly significant
lol
Apart from getting the feeling that the method
per se is not adequate in this case. Because I'd like to know where the fungus docks onto, for example, meaning the soil would have to remain undisturbed, and we'd have to have a way of seeing the fungal matter and how it is dispersed in the soil....
So that said, might as well share what I saw, FWIW
In the end I had 3 sites
- the original by the peonies & lilac,
- the "disturbed" ones in the newly landscaped grounds,
- and some more I found growing next to my wood chip pile.
I took pix of their habitat, and samples of the soil they were growing in, directly from around a rubbery sort of extension of the stem - and even tried sampling that rubbery thing, though I had to really tear it apart to get anything I could dilute in water.
View attachment 3927415
Not sure about those roots in there either - this is the rubbery thingie off a "
disturbed" one, and there wasn't anything growing
right next to them that would explain them growing there as they were...
This is where they were growing -
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a north-south cut between two buildings, not much sun (max a few hours in the morn), perhaps a bit of warmth getting stored in the gravel/rocks and the cement border they grew on:
View attachment 3927418
No special vegetation... so these defo aren't mycorrhizing
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And the substrate is a few cm of bark chip mulch on very clayey soil.
Which turned out to be waaay more bacterial than I would assume mushroom grounds to be
...as far as I could tell...
View attachment 3927423
(actually this one is better than most views I got - it has something that may even be a spore in the middle)
I really have trouble with these soil samples, as compared to the compost and ACT I mostly examine, especially on account of all the minerals in there.
And here's where my main insecurity about my sampling comes in - do I let the debris settle enough to make the sample even worth viewing, or do I lose the heavier components, giving me an inaccurate impression (and losing the consistency of taking the sample at x time after mixing?
Or should I be diluting these soil samples where all this mineral matter gets so much in the way that I have a really hard time recognizing anything in there... though usually that is done only for the bacteria counts
@ShLUbY? Anything you're learning at uni that could point me in the right direction on this?
Examining the stuff that made up the rubbery part, which was more fungal than the soil outside it, I actually did dilute, once (i.e. take 1ml of the 1:4 diluted soil and dilute 1:4 with water again) - to see if I could find any protozoans? (I hadn't seen a single higher-troph creature - that I could identify as such without question, in either sample)
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OTOH, from what I've read over at iHearAll's about morel cultivation, it could be that those sclerotia were already in the substrate they brought in last fall, and that the temps/moisture this year was just so perfect they sprouted anyways?
Moving to the other two sites, the vegetation growing around them, and how they were growing in the soil:
The pine-rose-lilac site:
View attachment 3927426
Vegetation
oh these were overripe btw, and starting to smell really strong (as opposed to the lovely aroma of the peony ones, and the distinctive smell-less-ness of the "disturbed" ones)
View attachment 3927427
And how it was growing -the rubbery thing sitting on the root of the pine tree (that had died last year on account of - probably - an airborne pine virus - and had gotten cut down last fall):
View attachment 3927428
The soil more fungal and structured - full of microaggregates - than over at the other site
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Oh. I've run out of picture allowance for this post....