Fresh cultivated mushrooms being held after harvest
GrowingMushrooms

Mushrooms FAQ

This FAQ explains why the site grows from tissue culture rather than spores, and how cloning, spawn, and dependable results fit together. It is a useful entry point for readers trying to understand cultivation from the ground up.

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Growing

Spawn

This article explains what spawn does, how grain, sawdust, and plug spawn differ, and why growers match each type to the substrate and species at hand. It is a practical foundation page for the rest of the cultivation section.

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Growing

Cultivation Method

A practical overview of an oyster-focused cultivation approach built around clean spawn, proper substrate preparation, and steady colonization before fruiting conditions are introduced. It serves as a more hands-on companion to the broader growing articles.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between mycelium and spawn?
Mycelium is the living vegetative body of the fungus, while spawn is a material such as grain, sawdust, or plugs that has already been colonized by mycelium and is used to introduce it to a new substrate.
Is the growing section aimed at beginners?
Yes. The growing section is written as a practical starting point for readers who want to understand cultivation basics, including spawn, colonization, and simple growing methods.
Does Wild Branch Mushrooms focus on spores or tissue culture?
The site explains why tissue culture and cloning are often preferred when growers want more predictable traits, cleaner starting material, and more repeatable cultivation results.