How to Find the Proper Temperature For Your Mushroom HousePosted by ding pan on May 12th, 2018 Summary Full Content A high temperature in a close house or cellar is injurious; it hurries in the crop and forces up the mushrooms weak and thin-fleshed and with ungainly, long stems; it soon exhausts the bed. The time when its evil effects are least visible is early in the fall and late in spring when the outside temperature is high, and when the beds are in somewhat airy rather than close quarters. In the Dosoris cellars mushroom bagging machine there is a steady difference of about 5 in the temperature between the end next the boiler, which is kept at 60 precisely, and that of the farther end, which registers 55 steadily. There is very little difference in the weight of crop produced or; the beds at either end of these cellars, but what little there is in favor of the cooler end. At 60 the crop begins to come in six to seven weeks after spawning, lasts for three to four weeks in heavy bearing and a week, or more, longer in light bearing, and then it gradually dwindles. In a temperature of 55 it may be seven weeks after spawning before the mushrooms appear. In a temperature of 60 they may take a few days longer in appearing, but, as a rule, they are firm, heavy, short-stemmed, and perhaps a little furry on top and clammy to the touch, and the beds last in good bearing for two months ; indeed, often a whole winter long. But I have failed to find that the whole crop from a bed in a 45 to 55 temperature was any greater than that of a like bed in a 55 to 57 temperature; it is merely a case of getting in six weeks from the warmer house what it takes ten weeks to get from the cooler one. In a temperature of 50 it is not necessary to cover the beds to increase their warmth, nor is it needful even in one of 45, if there is a fair warmth in the body of the bed to keep the spawn working; but if the warmth of the interior of the bed falls under 57, and the atmospheric temperature under 45, the bed should be kept warm by Mushroom mixer machine covering with hay, straw, matting, or other material, or better still by boxing it over and laying this covering on the outside of the boxing. When cold thicken the covering, when warm lessen it. Like it? Share it!More by this author |