That 5hit
Well-Known Member
i dont know if this is true but research says it is
theres a guy on here trying to sale a bag of dirt with mushroom spores in it that produces CO2 for 6 month at 20,000 ppm's in a 10 x 10 area non-stop (24-7) 2000ppm's for every 1000 cf . he says all you have to do is set the bag in the room at or above canopy level and it does all the work for you
now i looked it up on wiki and they said that CO2 is a byproduct of fungus living in dirt (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mycelium)
this guy i saling a bag of this stuff for 20$
but after thinking about it i said if it does work this stuff could be made
there were issue's that came up in that thread like light, odor, and potential pathogens , all of these prolly could be solved, how? IDK. maybe a cheap foam cooler
(can someone do this for me)
mycelial = i'm willing to bet that any type of mushroom fungi will produce CO2 as a by-product
all i need is some good fert. compost (org. soil) to let it live in
place all that stuff in a cooler with air holes on side
place a co2 meter nere it and see what happens
it will work
for free
its like the surgar and yest method but better and last longer
now im not trying to hurt this guys bussness but diy is a lifestyle
but why would i pay anything when i can find some shroom outside a tap some spores over some soil and put all of that in a garbage bag and throw in some banana peel or something for the shroom to feed on
i know that i maybe missing some thing but we'll figure it out
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Fungal mycelia
Mycelium (plural mycelia) is the vegetative part of a fungus, consisting of a mass of branching, thread-like hyphae. The mass of hyphae is sometimes called shiro, especially within the fairy ring fungi.
CO2
Mycelium is vital in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems for its role in the decomposition of plant material. It contributes to the organic fraction of soil and its growth releases carbon dioxide (CO2) back into the atmosphere.
The mycelium of mycorrhizal fungi increases the efficiency of water and nutrient absorption of most plants and confers resistance to some plant pathogens. Mycelium is an important food source for many soil invertebrates.
this is a pic of the back of the bag of what it clames
im not trying to advertize for them because this stuff could be ezly made
lets crack this code -the more we know the more we grow
maybe even spread some baking active yeast onto some muddy heavyly moist soil to see what happens
re. yeast is a fungus, but the surgar yeast water method does not last long- maybe the soil acts to slow the science down and is why this method last so long - co2 is a byproduct of food coverision by the fungus digestion maybe even try moisting the soil with surgar water to help feed the fungus
theres a guy on here trying to sale a bag of dirt with mushroom spores in it that produces CO2 for 6 month at 20,000 ppm's in a 10 x 10 area non-stop (24-7) 2000ppm's for every 1000 cf . he says all you have to do is set the bag in the room at or above canopy level and it does all the work for you
now i looked it up on wiki and they said that CO2 is a byproduct of fungus living in dirt (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mycelium)
this guy i saling a bag of this stuff for 20$
but after thinking about it i said if it does work this stuff could be made
there were issue's that came up in that thread like light, odor, and potential pathogens , all of these prolly could be solved, how? IDK. maybe a cheap foam cooler
(can someone do this for me)
mycelial = i'm willing to bet that any type of mushroom fungi will produce CO2 as a by-product
all i need is some good fert. compost (org. soil) to let it live in
place all that stuff in a cooler with air holes on side
place a co2 meter nere it and see what happens
it will work
for free
its like the surgar and yest method but better and last longer
now im not trying to hurt this guys bussness but diy is a lifestyle
but why would i pay anything when i can find some shroom outside a tap some spores over some soil and put all of that in a garbage bag and throw in some banana peel or something for the shroom to feed on
i know that i maybe missing some thing but we'll figure it out
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Fungal mycelia
Mycelium (plural mycelia) is the vegetative part of a fungus, consisting of a mass of branching, thread-like hyphae. The mass of hyphae is sometimes called shiro, especially within the fairy ring fungi.
CO2
Mycelium is vital in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems for its role in the decomposition of plant material. It contributes to the organic fraction of soil and its growth releases carbon dioxide (CO2) back into the atmosphere.
The mycelium of mycorrhizal fungi increases the efficiency of water and nutrient absorption of most plants and confers resistance to some plant pathogens. Mycelium is an important food source for many soil invertebrates.
this is a pic of the back of the bag of what it clames
im not trying to advertize for them because this stuff could be ezly made
lets crack this code -the more we know the more we grow
maybe even spread some baking active yeast onto some muddy heavyly moist soil to see what happens
re. yeast is a fungus, but the surgar yeast water method does not last long- maybe the soil acts to slow the science down and is why this method last so long - co2 is a byproduct of food coverision by the fungus digestion maybe even try moisting the soil with surgar water to help feed the fungus