Follow us on Twitter

SoVaLife Blogs

Blogging about life in Southern Virginia - arts, entertainment, dining, hobbies, etc.

Apr 15
2010

Learn to grow shiitake mushrooms; hint: you plant them in logs!

Posted by: Lisa Kipps-Brown in Lifestyle

Joe Foster demonstrates how to insert spawn into an oak log to start the process of growing shiitake mushrooms.  Innoculated logs will be on display at the May 1st Plant Sale.The Southside Master Gardeners’ Spring Plant Sale will be held at the Halifax Extension Office/Halifax Public Library parking area on Saturday, May 1 from 7:30 a.m. to noon, rain or shine.  Shiitake mushroom logs and rain barrels will be on display. 

Shiitake mushrooms, flavorful and nutritious, are also known for their medicinal qualities. The exciting news is that they can be grown right here in Southside Virginia.  The mushrooms are cultivated using a process that basically imitates Nature.  Recently felled hardwood trees, cut into 40 inch logs, are used as the growing medium. A fresh White Oak log, for example, cut to length and inoculated with viable spores called mushroom spawn is all that is needed to grow Shiitakes.

The logs are “planted” by stuffing spawn into a series of small pre-drilled holes. Logs are then placed in a shady spot where they incubate for 6-18 months to allow the spawn to fully colonize. Fruiting occurs seasonally during natural weather fluctuations over the next several years. Typically a log will fruit a dozen times in a 3 year period.

On a small scale growing Shiitake mushrooms can be great fun and growing on a large scale can potentially become a profitable cash crop.  The display will include inoculated logs and informational handouts. 

With the record rains in the past year, collecting rain may not seem important.  However, in Southside Virginia a drought will occur every 5 years and a severe drought every 10 so don’t get too comfortable. 

Rain barrels collect rainwater runoff from a roof.  One inch of rainfall from a 20’ x 40’ roof can yield 500 gallons of water.   Although rain barrels generally only hold 50 gallons, one small rain can fill a barrel giving you enough water to take care of your containers or a small vegetable garden for several weeks. 

To expand your water conserving capacity, rain barrels can be attached to each other so that one main barrel receives the rainwater from the downspout and overflows into subsequent barrels.  A series of six would take care of most watering needs for an entire summer.  A drip irrigation system or a soaker hose can be attached at the last barrel nozzle and used to water landscape beds or vegetable gardens.  The advantage of these systems is getting water right to the roots.  Plants take up water through their roots not their leaves.

In addition to rain barrels, a wide range of plants--vegetables, annuals, perennials, herbs and houseplants--will be on sale at the May 1st Plant Sale. New to the sale this year are garden accessories, such as bluebird houses, tobacco sticks, bamboo poles, painted flowerpots, composted manure, soil test kits, decorative rocks and driftwood. Southside Master Gardeners, in conjunction with the Halifax Improvement Council, are also offering Earth Savvy multi-use green bags as a not-for-profit project for only $1 each.

Other interesting and helpful demonstrations include an herbal display, hypertufa, vermiculture composting and tool sharpening.  Each will include informative handouts and the opportunity to sign up for related classes.  Master Gardeners will be available to answer your gardening questions throughout the morning.

Trackback(0)
Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment
You must be logged in to post a comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.

busy

FREE SoVaMusic App

Listen to all four Lakes Media Network stations on your iPhone or iPad with our FREE app.  Classic rock, country, soft rock, hits from the 60s, 70s and 80s - all at your fingertips - plus News, Weather, and more!
app_store_badge
sovamusic_icon

Tag Cloud

60th District 911 agribusiness antivirus apps arts b&b's backup banister lake Berry Hill bloggers browsers carbonite Chamber of Commerce charitable donations clean energy cleanup comedy computer repair Connie Nyholm conservation Convergence Art Guild courthouse dance Dane Ferguson Danville David Martin Del. James Edmunds Destination Downtown South Boston dining Ducks on the Dan DVR economic development education emergency emergency responder Emmitt Smith energy entertainment entrepreneurship family Firefox fraud alert free stuff Frigemates funeral gadgets gardening geeks General Assembly Glenn Brown Glerin Business Resources Gov. Bob McDonnell GPS graphic design Haiti halifair Halifax Chamber Halifax County Fair hclt herbs history holidays House of Delegates Hugh Vaughan hunting IALR ice storm IDA Internet Explorer iphone Isadora Duncan jobs kinex remote backup service Leigh Cockram Lindstrand Loie Fuller Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling lunch mapping master gardeners Media Center motorsports Moving Voices Ms. D. Productions Muses of Modern Dance museum music music and math news offshoring Paul Davis performing arts pests pets politics power outage prizery radio stations rails to trails real estate remote backup Riverstone Ruth St. Denis safety site info small business social media social networking solar energy South Boston Southern Virginia SoVaLife speedup summer theatre SVHEC SVRA SWAM taxes technology tourism Tourism dept. Town of Halifax traditions travel uranium mining VIPER VIR Virginia traditions volunteer fire fighter weather webcams websites wildlife windows youtube