Wait a minute - your cubs take more than 18 days? Usually they take about 5 to colonize.Cambo's and Cyan's are the fastest myc growth i have ever seen. they blew me away. total colonization of 1L WBS/rye in 15-18 days for the cambo's and 18-20 for the CY's.
they fruit fast to, and the flushes are usually a BEAST so im thinking your friends will be happy
P.S: What did you case with? a thin layer or a thick layer?
If your doing G2G transfers yes, but if your sporating new spores it takes 3-5 days for the spores to latch and start to multiply, then another 12-15 days to colonize the jars.Wait a minute - your cubs take more than 18 days? Usually they take about 5 to colonize.
I'm not talking about grain to grain, either liquid culture or straight multi-spore. Of course the multi-spore takes a few days to start germinating but I have found that rye will colonize pretty much any amount in less than a week from the apearance of mycelium - at 80 degrees. You might consider enriching your medium with a little malt extract or some straw steap.If your doing G2G transfers yes, but if your sporating new spores it takes 3-5 days for the spores to latch and start to multiply, then another 12-15 days to colonize the jars.
doing G2G transfers are using allready established mycelium (isialy 1/4 colonized grains, 3/4 uncolonized) so the Myc has a LARGE head start. under the right conditions (small jars, proper temps, CO2 levels around 12,000 PPM) the jars will colonize in as little as 3 days.....
P.S: we arn't talking about cubes anymore.... we are talking about Panaeolus (Pan cyans, Pan cambo's, ect) which has a slightly slower metabolism than cubensis...
well considering thats the MAIN factor, and you have to factor in that 90% of people dont use incubators to keep a perfect 80 F (26 C), its cheaper, and easier to simply let them sit around 22-24 C (70-75 F). using an incubator to ensure temperature increases mycelium metabolism (to as much as double...), the faster the myc metabolizes its surrounding environment the faster it "grows"in less than a week from the apearance of mycelium - at 80 degrees
well considering thats the MAIN factor, and you have to factor in that 90% of people dont use incubators to keep a perfect 80 F (26 C), its cheaper, and easier to simply let them sit around 22-24 C (70-75 F). using an incubator to ensure temperature increases mycelium metabolism (to as much as double...), the faster the myc metabolizes its surrounding environment the faster it "grows"
When you factor metabolism in 12-15 days for colonization isn't that big of a jump, considering my myc is growing at around 22 C (72~F).
P.S not trying to be an asshole. just telling it the way it the way i have experianced it.... over the last 2 years.....
Hang on ANC, we aren't talking about bulk substrate. That will take some time - but I don't believe you can actually have too much spawn - that is unless you are using SO much that you have more spawn than substrate. I've seen a 30 gallon bag of straw colonize in 10 days and have heard that if you use shredded pf cakes you can colonize horse manure mixures in 3 - and I believe it. They say that you can take your cake to a cheese grater and reduce it to tiny particles almost like dust - sounds like quite a spawning technique.Large tubs takes time man. Unless you start with way too much spawn.
yea, im under the exact same opinion.... its impossible to have to much spawn. if someone realy wanted to they could just spawn WBS into a mono and fruit it, it would be a waste but it would still do the job.but I don't believe you can actually have too much spawn....I've seen a 30 gallon bag of straw colonize in 10 days and have heard that if you use shredded pf cakes you can colonize horse manure mixures in 3 - and I believe it.
I just pulled a huge 50g(wet)+ fruit off of a coir tray.Good question. From what I've been reading. I know that they fruit better with a deeper sub. But as far as size of fruits. So far my largest are around 4g dry. And those are big.
I like monotubs. Easy and can be made to be more reliable with practice. You may find the user Batcave style to be interesting since he fruits his monos like large cakes. He uses the same ingredients, but just fruits them outside of the pan/tray. Why not change it up once in a while?Okay, I see what I can do better next time. I need to add more spawn to my coir and make it deeper. Being new at this I prefer the coir monotub over the PF-Tek cakes. The cakes are said to be better for newbies, but I think that monotubs are easier, JMO.