🍄 Gardening 🍄 Gymnopilus punctifolius

CrimsonRambeller820

Bluelighter
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Jul 12, 2020
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Recently, I was gifted with a print some of the most amazing looking Gymnopilus I have ever seen in my life. I don't believe it is active, but I'm going to grow it nonetheless cause I like Gymnopilus and want to ensure proper preservation and replication by the securement of prints by whatever means necessary out of the scope of the Gymnopilus species that are of interest to me. Now... I probably have at least a couple dozen cups of agar, and am planning on doing the innoculation via loop into sterile water then the syringe would be filled up with spore water which I can then put to different plates.
Good luck, good hunting, and stay outta sight from the 🐷's.
 
Doesn't seem to want to grow! Oh well. Will be focusing on other Gymnopilus species until I come across some viable spore.
Recently, I was gifted with a print some of the most amazing looking Gymnopilus I have ever seen in my life. I don't believe it is active, but I'm going to grow it nonetheless cause I like Gymnopilus and want to ensure proper preservation and replication by the securement of prints by whatever means necessary out of the scope of the Gymnopilus species that are of interest to me. Now... I probably have at least a couple dozen cups of agar, and am planning on doing the innoculation via loop into sterile water then the syringe would be filled up with spore water which I can then put to different plates.
Good luck, good hunting, and stay outta sight from the 🐷's.
 
Would that be Gymnopilus Junonius [Japan] of which some subspecies are claimed to contain Psilocybine according to WIKI.

Like Shroomsa lot, but know sniplets about tte species. It assumingly the biggests single living organisme on earth,
other kind though but sticks.

Armillaria ostoyae

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/strange-but-true-largest-organism-is-fungus/

edit:
Big Blue Whale 200 Ton.

In 2003 Catherine Parks of the USFS in Oregon and her colleagues published their discovery of the current behemoth,
a 2,384-acre Armillaria ostoyae.
How many ton s would that weigh?

But trees get big to:
So does the 6,615-ton (six-million-kilogram) colony of a male quaking aspen tree and his clones that covers 107 acres (43 hectares) of a Utah mountainside.
 
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