Another great video from the Goddess of the garden,you are just awesome and you being easy on the eyes completes it. Thank you for sharing. God Bless you and yours.
Thank you! I would buy this if you want to grow indoors. The blocks end up being a waste of money I feel if you don't have the right environment for them. The mushrooms I would grow are any of the oyster mushrooms, the golden are super tasty, and lions mane. Lion's Mane is a super brain food and they taste so good to me. I make "crab" cakes with them and I'm working on a tincture for medicinal use now.
@@theaeroponictowerchannel Sorry, when you say I would buy "this", are you saying the bags are a good option for indoor growing? Are blocks different from the bags?
@@CAMDEC1217 I don't think the link attached. Here it is again. This is the grow tent that allows mushrooms to grow to their fullest potential. Just setting a block on the counter usually is a waste of money. Mushrooms need the proper environment to grow to their full potential. Here is the grow system I would get. northspore.com/products/automated-boomr-bin-mushroom-monotub
How do you learn with confidence what mushrooms you find you can eat? Even if you grew them, an imposter might be lurking. I worry Id risk hurting my family.
We should have a healthy respect for nature but we have also been programmed to fear things of nature and things homegrown. There are very deadly mushrooms but it's easy to know if what you planted is what grew if you learn about what you are growing. Look a likes of what I grow that are dangerous don't actually look anything like the specimen. There are some characteristics but it's easy to tell if it's not what I planted. Wild foraging is different. That I would only do initially with someone who can take you out in the field and teach you first hand.
Would love a video of you planting mushrooms in your greenstalk. Thanks
Another great video from the Goddess of the garden,you are just awesome and you being easy on the eyes completes it. Thank you for sharing. God Bless you and yours.
I grow my lions mane in a small wood chip or almost sawdust block
Perfect timing on this video, I recently just purchased a brick of golden oysters from a local producer to grow indoors.!!
So fun!! Golden are my favorite. They are so crisp and make everything taste amazing. I use them like onion as a base ingredient in so many things.
I have a mushroom growing fb group here. facebook.com/groups/789259499560094
When you're done with that straw tower are you turning it into compost?
Yes. I'll toss it in my garden beds.
Steff which mushroom type (to grow in bag) would you recommend for a beginner? Thanks for all you do. Love your videos.
Thank you! I would buy this if you want to grow indoors. The blocks end up being a waste of money I feel if you don't have the right environment for them. The mushrooms I would grow are any of the oyster mushrooms, the golden are super tasty, and lions mane. Lion's Mane is a super brain food and they taste so good to me. I make "crab" cakes with them and I'm working on a tincture for medicinal use now.
@@theaeroponictowerchannel Sorry, when you say I would buy "this", are you saying the bags are a good option for indoor growing? Are blocks different from the bags?
@@CAMDEC1217 I don't think the link attached. Here it is again. This is the grow tent that allows mushrooms to grow to their fullest potential. Just setting a block on the counter usually is a waste of money. Mushrooms need the proper environment to grow to their full potential. Here is the grow system I would get. northspore.com/products/automated-boomr-bin-mushroom-monotub
@@CAMDEC1217 I also have a private FB mushroom growing group here if you want to join. facebook.com/groups/789259499560094
How do you learn with confidence what mushrooms you find you can eat? Even if you grew them, an imposter might be lurking. I worry Id risk hurting my family.
We should have a healthy respect for nature but we have also been programmed to fear things of nature and things homegrown. There are very deadly mushrooms but it's easy to know if what you planted is what grew if you learn about what you are growing. Look a likes of what I grow that are dangerous don't actually look anything like the specimen. There are some characteristics but it's easy to tell if it's not what I planted. Wild foraging is different. That I would only do initially with someone who can take you out in the field and teach you first hand.