• home
  • categories
  • mushroom cultivation
  • Mushroom cultivation - introduction

     Mushroom cultivation representative image

    “Mushrooms are miniature pharmaceutical factories, and of the thousands of mushroom species in nature, our ancestors and modern scientists have identified several dozen that have a unique combination of talents that improve our health.” – Paul Stamets

    What is mushroom cultivation?

    The first thing to say, by the way, is that mushrooms are not plants (even though they’re listed in our ‘plants’ section – we’re guessing that most people think they are, and so would expect to find them here). They actually belong to the fungi ‘kingdom’ rather than the plant kingdom.

    Button mushrooms in a growing box.

    Mushroom cultivation is the same as any other kind of cultivation – but they’re quite fiddly to grow. Mushrooms are grown from ‘spawn’ – mushroom tissue culture that has been produced from spores grown in sterile / laboratory conditions (contamination is a big problem at this stage). Spawn can be obtained from specialist suppliers, then added to a substrate (compost, a log, coffee grounds etc.) to spread their mycelium (thread-like root system) and produce a crop.

    Oyster mushroom tissue culture in a petri dish.

    There are two major stages in mushroom growth. The first is the vegetative stage – the young, developing spawn is encouraged to feed and grow, to get to the second, fruiting stage, when the mushrooms can be harvested. So mushroom spawn suppliers provide the early vegetative stage, and it’s up to the grower to nurture it to the fruiting stage.

    There are three types of mushrooms that can be cultivated:

    1. humus-inhabiting – can be grown in a mix of compost, horse manure, soil and straw; includes the classic button mushroom varieties, as well as others such as blewits or shaggy ink-caps
    2. wood-inhabiting – grown in logs, like shiitake, maitake (hen of the woods), ear fungus or monkey’s head fungus
    3. mycorrhizal – grown in association with tree roots; truffles, in other words
    How to get started growing organic mushrooms at home.

    History

    Humus-inhabiting: around 1650, in France, it was noticed that button mushrooms appeared naturally in the autumn after the melon crop. So they kept them damp and got another crop – of mushrooms. They died as soon as it became too cold though – and so they put them in trays and moved them to caves, where the season was extended by protecting them from the cold and the winds that evaporated the moisture from the soil. They were soon growing them year-round in a controlled environment in tunnels, and the mushroom cultivation industry was born. Britain followed in the early 19th century, and the US in the early 20th century.

    Shiitake mushrooms growing on a hardwood log.

    Wood-inhabiting: there are written records of shiitake mushroom cultivation from around 1000 years ago in China. Cultivation was learnt from observation of wild specimens growing on oak or beech trees. They obtained spawn as best they could without contamination, and inoculated it into logs of the same species that they grew on in the wild.

    Mycorrhizal: truffle cultivation has been complicated by the fact that in the wild, truffles only grow on the roots of a host tree. It was thought that they could only be collected from the wild – and in fact until the 20th century, it was thought that truffles were part of the tree. In 1972 in New Zealand, oak trees were planted with a view to inoculating their roots with truffle spawn.

    How to inoculate shiitake mushroom logs.

    In Europe and North America there is a community of fungi associated with oak roots, all of which will compete with truffles and make cultivation very difficult. Oaks are not native to New Zealand, and so the truffle spawn had no competitors. By 1985, they were able to produce a consistent crop within 7 years – so still difficult but not impossible. They can now be cultivated anywhere, on the roots of oak or hazel – but it takes a lot of land as you have to plant the trees as well. A free-draining loam is required – clay soil isn’t good for truffles.

    What are the benefits of mushroom cultivation?

    Mushroom cultivation can be a very interesting hobby with delicious results, that could easily become a profitable small business, due to the low cost of inputs and high value of the crop.

    Mushroom cultivation in a cave, Paris.

    Production costs are low – for example humus-inhabiting species can be grown in coffee grounds that coffee shops would usually be more than happy for you to collect for free. Someone realised that coffee grounds have already been rendered sterile, and contain the cellulose and lignin that mushrooms need – the perfect substrate.

    The substrate can be a waste product – like animal manure (although of course this is often used on gardens), or the coffee grounds mentioned above. There are lots of coffee shops and restaurants, there’s quite a lot of waste produced per cup, and millions of cups are consumed every day.

    Cultivating shiitake and lion’s mane mushrooms in woodland.

    Mushrooms are very good for us. They are healthy and nutritious, and some species have medicinal properties. Reishi bracket fungus has been used to produce a medicinal tea for centuries, and now it’s used alongside conventional treatments for HIV, to help restore the immune system.

    What can I do?

    First think about what kind of mushroom-growing project you’re going for. Do some research on suppliers, what substrate you will need, and how to look after the spawn during the vegetative stage. Here’s some general information to get you started, and below is some advice for selected species:

    Cultivated black truffle, Tuber melanosporum.

    Oyster mushrooms: Mix 500g oyster mushroom spawn with 2.5kg coffee grounds (fresh – use within 24 hours of collection). Keep in bags in a warm, dark place for 2-3 weeks, then make some slits in the sides and mist spray a couple of times per day for 1-2 weeks. A network of mycelium will spread and produce fruit that are ready for harvest in 3-4 days. You can then compost the coffee grounds. The cellulose and lignin will be gone, but they will still break down.

    Button mushrooms: Source your spawn (you can’t do it yourself unless you have a lab) and your substrate. You could possibly get manure from a local farm or stables, but it will need to be treated as it will be full of microscopic contaminants. Get manure that has been dried for a few weeks, although it will still contain fungus spores and will need to be sterilised. The easiest way to do this is in a large, industrial pressure cooker. However, you must allow the sterilised manure to cool completely afterwards, otherwise it will kill the spawn. Add chopped (and sterilised) straw to the manure, and mix with the tissue culture (spawn) – around 1:10, spawn: substrate. Put this mix into trays around 6 inches (150mm) deep, but leave the top 1 inch (25mm) for a casing or topping layer of good quality compost from a garden centre (that will already have been sterilised). This layer will make sure that spores from the air don’t interfere with your mushroom spawn. Keep the trays moist, warm (between 15-28°C) and dark for a few weeks as mycelium starts to develop throughout the substrate. The fine white filaments will spread and feed on lignin and cellulose (the only food for mushrooms, whatever the substrate). After a few weeks, the fruiting bodies will push their way through the compost topping layer.

    Shiitake mushroom spawn delivered on dowels and grain.

    Shiitake: Spawn is usually supplied on wooden dowels, that provide lignin and cellulose. Dowels will arrive covered in furry white mycelium. Drill holes and inoculate logs with the dowels. Seal the holes with cheese wax – but not beeswax, because bees might arrive to reclaim it! If you don’t seal the hole, the spawn might dry out and die, or other fungus spores may get in and out-compete it. You can buy pre-inoculated logs, but this will work out more expensive – you can do it yourself.

    King oyster mushrooms (Pleurotus eryngii) growing in coffee grounds through slits in a plastic bag.

    An important thing to remember with wood-inhabiting species is that you can’t use soft woods, as conifers contain a natural fungicide – not ideal when you’re trying to grow mushrooms. However, hardwoods are denser, making it more difficult for the mushrooms to produce mycelium. This means that the vegetative phase can last up to 18 months, giving more time for drying out or cross-contamination to occur. Leave the logs outside, under shrubbery so that they are in the shade and protected from frost and from winds that can accelerate evaporation. Moisten the logs in dry spells.

    Truffle plantation – Abruzzo, Italy.

    Truffles: Still a very specialist business with a much longer vegetative stage. But it’s a high-value crop that could suit an intrepid smallholder. You could plant maybe an acre of inoculated hazels (which grow much faster than oaks) and if you don’t manage to produce truffles, at least you can harvest wood and nuts.

    Starting a mushroom-growing business

    Button, oyster and even shiitake mushrooms are relatively easy to grow. Others are more difficult, but they tend to be more prized and therefore fetch a higher price. The more prized / exotic the species, the higher the chance of failure, but the higher the rewards if successful.

    Beech mushrooms, originally from Japan, can be grown in any temperate climate, in sawdust.

    There are some useful tricks to increase the chances of success of a mushroom cultivation business. Some growers have found that a way to stimulate the fruiting phase is to induce environmental stress. In nature, fungi will exist in the vegetative phase, feeding, for several weeks, but if there is a sudden cold snap, they will fruit. They receive a genetic message that winter has arrived, and this may be the last chance they have to produce spores and pass on their genes. This effect can be recreated artificially. If after a week or so, mycelium is spreading through the substrate, put it in the fridge at 5°C for two days, then bring it out, and you can get fruiting bodies in half the usual time.

    Thanks to Clifford Davy of Forest Foragers for information.


    Whilst you’re here, why not take a look at the other 30+ plants and growing topics available? And don’t forget to visit our main topics page to explore over 200 aspects of low-impact living and our homepage to learn more about why we do what we do.


    The specialist(s) below will respond to queries on this topic. Please comment in the box at the bottom of the page.

    Benedict Noel of The Mushroom Guide is author of a 9-part guide to growing shiitake mushrooms on our blog (starting here). He’s been hooked on mushroom growing since watching this TED talk in 2015 and has been building his knowledge and experience ever since. Since starting out, he’s helped run a couple of cultivation courses, given presentations at festivals and grown a wide variety of mushrooms, from oyster and shiitake to pioppino and chestnut.


    The views expressed here are those of the author and not necessarily lowimpact.org's


    7 Comments

    • 1Cheryl Butterworth July 27th, 2016

      Can anyone tell me if the ‘mushrooms’ fungii that have grown on my straw bales are edible. I am new to all of this and don’t want to poison myself. Here’s some pics.


    • 2Dave Darby July 28th, 2016

      Can’t post pics I’m afraid. We’re working on it. Can you put them on social media and link to them?


    • 3Harshana Krishantha September 5th, 2018

      I am Sri Lankan graduated student and I would like to learn about cultivating mushrooms. But in here no much of technology. If u can give us a training. That is please. Thank you all


    • 4Marcus November 24th, 2020

      thanks for the really useful article


    • 5Lidia December 30th, 2020

      thanks for this article. Does anyone here have an experience cultivating truffles? I have the hardest time finding info about this…Would they grow on coffee grounds, like Oysters?


      Also, I have read that mushroom do not grow on conifers, pines, etc…yet, in another place that truffles like pines…


      Just started learning about them and it feels overwhelming the contradictory information…


    • 6John V.Kimario September 16th, 2022

      Goodmorning from Morogoro Tanzania.


      Thank you for the Oyster mushroom notes on wood logs.


      I’d ba happy to learn more on best ways to make oyster and shitake dowels at home. Please share your experiences on this.


      Thank you


      Remain Blessed


      John


    • 7Stewart November 12th, 2022

      Hi John

      First you need some spores, take a spore print in sterile conditions, then remove spores suspended in water into your syringe … keep it cold.

      Make your dowels into 5-7cm lengths, soak for a few days and put in a heat proof vessel . Pressure cooker the bejesus out of them so the contents of soaked dowels are sterile.


      Inject the spores into the vessel. Wait to see white mycelium and they will be ready . Obviously not as simple as that but that is the basic process ..


    Leave a comment

    We welcome questions.

    There’s a crash coming – a slap from Mother Nature. This isn’t pessimistic; it’s realistic.

    The human impact on nature and on each other is accelerating and needs systemic change to reverse.

    We’re not advocating poverty, or a hair-shirt existence. We advocate changes that will mean better lives for almost everyone.

    Sign up to our newsletter

    Facebook icon Twitter icon Youtube icon

    All rights reserved © lowimpact 2023