>>999155Maybe you mean oyster mushrooms? Lobster mushrooms are bright orange and grow in healthy forests
Pic related.
>>999157They are wrong. Morchella rufobrunnea has been grown in the lab before, a guy named something Ower made a patent. The Chinese have also developed consistent outdoor growing techniques for Morchella importuna, and they are getting 3000kg yield per acre.
Noone has done any other indoor (lab) species than rufobrunnea though, and that specific morel is tiny and not very good. I am hoping to bring Morchella importuna indoors and get year-round harvests to beat out the chinese.
>>999160How are you growing them?
And yeah, the needs are insanely specific.
>>999161>Doesnt know he is talking to a mycologist>>999164Maybe not cure, but there is a growing body of evidence that shows they can help. Also, extracts form turkey tail have been shown to reduce incidence and severity of tumors in vivo (in living mice), which is extremely rare. We have almost nothing that has worked in vivo other than chemotherapy. When people are talking about "weed kills cancer cells" I get pissed. Yes, it does kill cancer cells, in a petri dish. So would a rifle, or bleach.
>>999212I can't say you will have any success, and unless you are a mycologist you will never pull it off indoors. But, there are a lot of methods that have hit and miss success in some climates. Wait until spring for this. Gather morels, it doesn't matter if they are aged/rotting, and blend them up with dechlorinated water and a tiny bit of sugar and ash (wood ash, just a couple pinches in a liter). You have just made a slurry. Now, find a spot of nice carbon-rich (lots of plant matter, or woody) soil near some trees (Pine trees for black morels, hardwoods for yellow) and dump it all over the ground. As soon as frost ends the following year, till all the soil. Then, hope for the best.