For the last time
@canndo , I have already agreed that light is a pinning trigger, just a minor one.
I also agree that if I let 2 agar dishs colonize that the dish exposed to light will most likely pin faster, BUT, if I was to do 3 dishs the one I expose to FAE thus causing evaporation, would pin faster than both.
There is tons of info out there on.this subject, it's not like I'm just making this up.
Comparing yourself in even.the slightest way to Roger Rabbit is laughable at best.
By the way, you would need more dishes than three. You would need at least four.
Now how do you determine the effects of evaporation rather than presence of co2?
Have you used a draeger in each situation? What are you using to measure evaporation rate on small surfaces, or are you measuring changes in environmental rh over time?
What is your definition of minor Vs major triggers in cubensis?
In your opinion, what is the order of importance?
Have you tried excluding all variables but one? (within acceptablity of course)
Have you tried auxins or pin extract to see if there is an inherent hormone that is the source of triggers?
What are fruiting inhibitors? Is there really a gas or emination from spores or the release of spores that inhibit future initiation of fruit?
What are the true moisture reservoirs in the growing complex? Is it truely the casing? If so, why do many have so little trouble with uncased complexes?
Have you measured water content of the complex before and after a flush? Two flushes?
Did you consider the weight of carbon in the calculation?
Compare wet weight yield with weight loss of the substrate?
I would be interested in all this, I am looking at water retention in uncased complexes and the relationship between free water and mycelium access. Look, I read this and see I may look like a dick. I don't want to do that. What I do want is for you to realize that we can have a discussion on these things without resorting to accusations.
I implore you to begin a new thread and reasonably show us where our assumptions and mistakes are. Itight be illuminating, I have little ego in the matter even if this thread makes it appear that I do. One cannot learn when one believes they have arrived.
It is true that I don't grow cubes or any other of the major variety because I grew all I ever needed long long ago. I have been working on a high temperature fruiting plurotus for ten years. I am fruiting in the mid
eighties consistently and need only a few more degrees.
This strain will exist entirely on palm fronds and waste. Given that palm waste presents a major problem in certain parts of the world, and palms grow in hot places, it would be nice to have an edible (if not choice, unfortunately) mushroom that grows in high heat, breaks down palm debris where ordinary composting is dismal, and yields a decent soil amendment as a waste stream.
So I am very interested in these things, and not simply to show novice growers how to get started. Nor to be right for its own sake or for my sense of self worth.
Don't just claim I have no clue, you have experience, give us clues, but please do so in a positive way. I tried to do so in this thread, to synthesize what I know with simple terms for the lay person. To take several different techniques from different places and blend them as a response to pf Tek, which I despise because of what it represents.
Sure, the house cleaning is over kill but it was an attempt to get people to see the micro flora in their homes and on their persons. It was an attempt to take the mystery of this domain out of the equation.
I hope I have succeeded, but for someone to come and instigate question without appropriate answers is bomb throwing. It raises doubt in those who might just want to give this a shot.