>>2517331Can we turn this into a all around permaculture thread?
I'm essentially in the process of experimenting and finding a universal mix of ideal plant soil and ideal oak sawdust/innoculated substrate, wood chips, actual chunks or branches of oak, what layers in what order in what amounts - to consistently yield both fungi and vegetables in essentially any size plot, and is scalable. I want to be able to apply this recipe to everything from a small flower pot to a 20 acre farm field
I've gotten it to work indoors with pink oyster and garlic both successfully yielding in the same pot, the entire bottom half of the pot is basically mushroom food and drainage which will not need to be replaced for a very long time, and the top half is compost and soil
I want to apply this at scale with buried innoculated oak logs/branches/wood chips by the wheelbarrow full, and a top layer of universal soil and compost for just about any veggie i want. I'm not attempting to simulate a mycorrhizal network, we don't know how that shit works yet but I do want to create a sort of self-feeding system of as many edible species in 1 plot as possible. a sort of outdoor terrarium
main problem here is fungi do not play nice with eachother. you'd need 1 very successful strain of 1 mushroom, not 2 strains of the same species, and physical barriers between plots to keep species from outcompeting eachother.