Its good to know what the herd does.
I'm priveledged to part of a very clued up group of entheobotany fanatics, even among us there is alot of disagreement, but, there is a diffirence between when someone does something wrong, or just in a diffirent manner.
So someone might come up with something new and noone will shoot him down as long as there is logic to his reasoning and hopefully similar or related practical experience.
The methods you will see me reccommend are normaly the most cost effective/simple/energy saveing winners of all things tried. As few of you know, I am a fulltime student of things psycedelic and natural as a pensioner with hours to kill every day for many years now. If I reccommend something its because its how i do it, not because its the best way out there imaginable.
Glad to hear my friend. Mine are in qt jars at only 79F so they are moving slow but I am glad to see that over half my 14 jars have 4 to 6 dime to nickle sized mycelium growth in them. Slowly but surely they are coming but not pic worthy yet. I am an inpatient man which is one of the reasons I love autoflower plants so if this goes about the same length as those I will be fine. Keep up your good work bro.The white mycelium is surely taking over the jars now... I see white thick strands of mycelium just like ANC's pictures! Excitement is bouncing off the walls at this very moment... will post pictures shortly![]()
As you worked with spores, shake the jars up well, you can break it appart a bit against a tire or a rubber shoe sole... don't wack the shit out of it, just enough to break it up some, then shake/rolll it to spread it in the jar, then when pieces gets to that size again, repeat.
Hey it happens, try and give those jars another half cc of spore solution.
Ah that's just it! If you don't think then don't talk and if you don't speak clealy then your not thinking clearly!
I love that Mad Hatter quote. It fit perfectly too.![]()
The Mad Hatter is no counterpart to your identity. Your Counterpart is the White Rabbit.
Shepj is most certainly the March Hare.