Growing Shiitake Mushrooms in Bags

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We picked up some bags of Shiitake and Oyster mushroom starters in bags from The Mushroom Man at the Richmond Seedy Saturday event last weekend and here are some photos of their progress, one week later. Pretty awesome. 

The mushrooms are growing on a substrate block of Fraser Valley Red Alder hardwood sawdust supplemented with millet grain, wheat bran and crushed limestone. When we purchased them, the mushrooms hadn’t started showing themselves, but after a week with the top of the bag open, they’ve grown really quickly. Chris and Julie harvested some of theirs for breakfast this morning and said they tasted incredible.

As the mushrooms grow, you cut the surrounding bag down or out away from them to give them space and whenever the block appears to be drying out, you place the base of it in some water for about 30 minutes, followed by holding the bag upside down to get out any extra water out.

The mushrooms do better in cooler temperatures so Chris and Julie have been keeping theirs in the ground level entryway to their home and my Chris and I are keeping ours in the garage for now. 

We paid $10 for each bag and each should yield about a pound and a half of mushrooms. Considering how organic Shiitake mushrooms can cost up to $12-$14 per pound, growing your own is the economical way to go and is a super fascinating experiment at the same time. The nice thing about doing them in bags means that apartment dwellers can grow their own as well. 

I don’t know a lot about creating these from scratch. We’ll start here and figure out the DIY details later, but Scott aka The Mushroom Man (linked above) is enthusiastic about growing mushrooms and he was happy to answer all of the questions we had. He’s located in East Vancouver so these mushroom kits are really accessible for Lower Mainland dwellers. Super fun. I recommend trying them out!

PS: check out the mushroom growing out of a mushroom in photos 4 & 5 above. Seriously fun.

A Nesting Muscovy

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Photo: Kai & Chris install protective chicken wire around one of our duck’s new nesting spots.

Last week we found new homes for a number of our Muscovy ducks because we’d gotten to a point where we had more than our little farm could properly handle (blogged here). We left ourselves with 4 sweet females and 1 punk rocker of a drake. Unfortunately, our drake went missing not long after the rest moved to new homes. Maybe he tried to follow them, maybe he decided to take up independent residence in our nearby forest and gully, or maybe one of our wild predators got to him (coyotes, owls, raccoons)? We’re very sad that he’s gone.

Our remaining females, however, seem to be enjoying their male-free life and are making cozy nesting spots for themselves in their paddock and around the farm. We discovered this female (pictured) in her new nesting spot after thinking that she’d gone missing. Instead, she was building herself this little space in an old animal feed frame in our side pasture. Since she’s spending most of her time in it, we decided to make some adjustments so she isn’t an easy target for night-time predators.

So, our early-week, strike’s-on/ school’s-off project was surrounding the feed frame with chicken wire and a little door we can open during the day, but close in the evenings. Now she’s nice and cozy and hopefully safe. Too bad our drake’s gone. Would have been fun to discover some ducklings waddling out of there one day…

Field trip to Richmond’s Seedy Saturday

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Chris K, Chris M, Kai and Julie pose with some of our Seedy Saturday purchases: starter bags for growing our own shitaake and oyster mushrooms!

This weekend we joined up with some other Maple Ridge gardening residents and carpooled down to the Seedy Saturday event at the Richmond Sharing Farm. 

It. Was. Awesome.

Gorgeous sunny day, LOTS of people enjoying the event, inspiring garden plots to look at, fun seeds to buy, gardening tips to learn… Very, very enjoyable.

In addition to the mushroom starter bags (in the photo above) from The Mushroom Man, we picked up some veggie seeds from the Richmond Fruit Tree project and from legendary Harold Steves (the man behind the creation of the Agricultural Land Reserve, his seed info here), as well as some berry bushes from The Urban Fruitery (no website).

Also at the event were the folks from Pacific Permaculture, a mason bee group, Tatiana’s Tomatoes (a local business with an INCREDIBLE number of tomato seeds that they save in their seed bank – we’re talking almost 4000 tomato varieties!), and another table that I didn’t get to (I think it was farm meat of some kind). 

Afterwards, some of us stopped by the West Coast Seeds store in Ladner to pick up a large list of additional seeds (SUPER cute store! Everyone should visit!) and now I’m pretty much obsessed with seeds. 

Big thanks to Gail (instructor of the current Growing Food workshops in Maple Ridge) for organizing the field trip! 

Other upcoming Seedy Saturday events in the Lower Mainland:

Mission – All Saints Anglican Church, April 7th, 9-2pm
Surrey
 – Historic Stewart Farm, April 14th, 11-3pm

Chilliwack – Mathieson Centre, April 28, 1-3