Growing mushrooms on tree trunks: instructions & tips

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Shady places in the garden are ideal locations for growing mushrooms on tree trunks. Here you can find out how you can grow delicious edible mushrooms in a natural way.

Oyster mushroom on the tree
Instead of simply harvesting fresh edible mushrooms in your own garden instead of in the forest - growing them on tree trunks makes it possible [Photo: Gertjan Hooijer / Shutterstock.com]

If you own a garden and have to clear a tree every now and then, you often don't know what to do with the wood. With the cultivation of edible mushrooms on tree trunks, the tree is used ideally and easily. Here you can find out how you can grow fresh mushrooms right on your doorstep without a lot of effort and for several years.

contents

  • Growing mushrooms on tree trunks
  • The right wood for growing mushrooms
  • Which types of mushrooms are suitable?
  • Inoculation spawn for tree trunks: Recommended sources of supply
  • Inoculating the wood
  • Store tree trunks
  • Put up tree trunks in the garden
  • Harvest mushrooms properly

Growing mushrooms on tree trunks

Growing edible mushrooms on wood is the most original and natural form of mushroom cultivation and was developed thousands of years ago in Southeast Asia - especially Japan and China. Shiitake mushrooms (

Lentinula edodes) as a gift to the kings and emperors of the country. The use of mushrooms plays an important role in traditional Chinese medicine to this day, and medicinal mushrooms were cultivated on tree trunks from an early age. We have put together for you how you can cultivate mushrooms with wood in your own garden.

The right wood for growing mushrooms

Most mushrooms prefer to grow on hardwoods such as beech, oak and birch, as well as on all fruit trees. They feed mainly on cellulose and lignin, the substances that make wood so hard and robust. Over time, they break down even the thickest trunks and recycle the dead wood into organic matter. Conifers, however, have viscous, sticky resins that most edible mushrooms prefer to avoid. The exception is the smoke-leaved sulfur head (Hypholoma capnoides), which particularly likes to colonize spruce trees and, more rarely, pines and silver firs.

The wood for the mushroom trunks should be cut as fresh as possible and then be stored for at least two, but not longer than four months. The trunk diameter of the wood should be about 20 to 30 centimeters and the length about 50 to 100 centimeters, otherwise the trunk will dry out too quickly. For shiitake, a little stem with a diameter of 10 to 15 centimeters is sufficient. The bark should be as undamaged as possible, because it will later hold the moisture in the wood better. The trunk is now watered for two to three days, during which it should be completely covered with water.

Which types of mushrooms are suitable?

Mushrooms form an extremely diverse realm of living things. They feed on food, ripe compost or even giant fallen trees. For your own mushroom cultivation in the garden you choose of course those edible mushrooms that decompose wood with preference. Here we have listed the most important types for you.

Oyster mushroom (Pleurotus ostreatus): One of the most famous tree-dwelling edible mushrooms that forms pressed-down hats that are rolled up around the edges when young. It is available in the colors pigeon blue, gray, white and light brown. Its taste is very fine and mild and is therefore very suitable for soups, sauces and meat dishes.

Enoki / velvet foot rubble (Flammulina velutipes): In Japan extremely popular edible mushroom with glossy honey-colored umbrellas that are darker towards the center. Cultivated in vessels and without light, forms elongated, colorless fruiting bodies and is usually only available in this way in stores. Wonderfully sweet and mild in taste.

Rose oyster mushroom (Pleurotus djamor): Also called flamingo mushroom because of its pale pink color. The mushroom is related to the oyster mushrooms and has a fan-like, lamellar-coated fruit body with a velvety surface and a fine mushroom taste.

Rose oyster mushroom on the tree
The rose oyster mushroom is a special eye-catcher [Photo: Cora Mueller / Shutterstock.com]

Lime oyster mushrooms / lemon yellow oyster mushrooms (Pleurotus citrinopileatus): Light yellow edible mushroom that is closely related to the oyster mushrooms, which can also be seen in the shape of the fruiting bodies. The taste is reminiscent of lemon, which makes it very interesting as a side dish to fish or salads.

Smoky Brimstone Head (Hypholoma capnoides): It is the only edible mushroom that predominantly colonizes conifers such as spruce and pine. The yellow-brownish fruit bodies have a nutty-spicy taste. However, there is a risk of confusion with other, poisonous sulfur head species, because these colonize the same woods as the edible mushroom.

Shiitake (Lentinula edodes): A fawn edible mushroom with light flakes on the round hat and light brown-whitish stem, which is very popular in Asian cuisine due to its umami taste. Must be cultivated as an air culture without soil.

Inoculation spawn for tree trunks: Recommended sources of supply

Finished mushroom mycelium is often offered as so-called grain or cereal spawn. The fungus grows through rye, wheat or other grains until the mycelium has spread over the entire area. The grain spawn is particularly easy to dose and colonizes the wood very quickly. Inoculation dowels are untreated wooden dowels on which the respective species of fungus has been cultivated. Here, too, the network of mushrooms has visibly grown through the entire wood when you bought it. Both variants are suitable for cultivation on tree trunks.

Ready-made mushroom spawn is also offered specifically for cultivation on tree trunks, especially on the Internet - but now also in hardware stores and garden centers. Here we introduce you to some German sources of supply.

Mushroom package has been sending various types of mushrooms from Nuremberg as grain spawn for a number of years. In addition, the mycelia can be purchased locally in the city.

Mushrooms & Equipment Shop based in Münsterland has been offering a wide variety of varieties for hobby and commercial growers since 2013. Inoculation dowels and grain spawn are available here.

Mycelium
The mushroom mycelium can be purchased from various suppliers [Photo: Kichigin / Shutterstock.com]

Mushroom malesfrom Saxony produce grain spawn and inoculation dowels in organic quality. Growing kits are now also available in the Dehner garden center.

PilzWald - The mushroom factory based in Cologne offers numerous types of mushrooms for cultivation on tree trunks with inoculated wooden dowels in their online shop.

Inoculating the wood

To inoculate the tree trunk, depending on the type of inoculation, you will need the following materials:

  • A chainsaw
  • A wood drill
  • A drill or a cordless screwdriver
  • A hammer
  • Foil or tape
  • The respective mushroom spawn

For the so-called Dowel inoculation with through-grown mushroom dowels, holes with a diameter of about eight millimeters are drilled into the prepared trunk with the drill. However, they should not be deeper than the length of the inoculation dowels. The dowels are then carefully driven into the hole with a hammer.

In the Borehole method you need a wood drill with a drill diameter of about 20 millimeters and grain spawn. The advantage is that this type of mushroom spawn spreads faster and more safely in the trunk than the mushroom dowel spawn. After drilling the holes, fill the mushroom spawn with a pestle and compress it slightly - the future mushroom trunk is ready.

the Cutting method requires longer trunks by one meter. Here, the trunk is sawed two or three times over its entire length with a chainsaw, from below or above. Then wrap the entire area with adhesive tape. The tape can also be stapled for a better hold. To fill in the grain spawn, cut a small window in the adhesive tape, carefully fill in the grain spawn and compress it a little.

Oyster mushroom on the stump
Oyster mushrooms can be grown very well with the cut inoculation method [Photo: 8th.creator / Shutterstock.com]

Finally, the inoculated trunk is wrapped in cling film and then perforated generously with a nail or something similar. This step is important so that the trunk retains enough moisture for the fungus and is also supplied with oxygen. Alternatively, the trunks can also be stored under a plastic tarpaulin, but the humidity must be checked more often here.

Store tree trunks

Freshly inoculated wood is not yet hardy as long as the fungus has not been able to grow through the trunk completely. At 10 to 25 ° C, depending on the type of fungus, it takes two to six months for the fungus to colonize its new living space. During this time, the trunk is best stored in the dark and checked for moisture every now and then. If mold grows on the surface of the wood, the trunk is too wet or the ventilation is insufficient. If you put the trunk in a more airy place, the unwanted fungal attack will disappear.

Put up tree trunks in the garden

If the wood is completely grown through, the mycelium of the fungus can already be seen emerging around the inoculation site. Now is the ideal time to remove the foil or tape and set up the wood in the garden. All of the species mentioned except for the Shiitake need contact with the earth in order to form fruiting bodies. To do this, the trunks are buried a third to half in the ground in a shady spot. This type of cultivation is also called earth culture.

Shiitake cultures, on the other hand, do not need a substrate to grow: their trunks are leaned upright against a fence or wall - this is also called air culture. Shiitake need to be activated in order for them to properly fruit bodies. First, the entire trunk is soaked in cold water for 24 hours. Then you push it three to four times on the ground, this promotes the fruiting body formation. Patience is now required, because the trunks usually do not need any further care, but they do need a lot of time. On hot and dry days, however, the mushrooms are happy to have some water around and on the trunk. Now it is time to be patient and wait for the first fruiting bodies. Because depending on the type of mushroom, it takes 6 to 24 months before you can harvest for the first time. By the way, tree trunks that are completely throughgrown are hardy and keep supplying fresh mushrooms for several years.

Shiitake on the tree
Tree trunks with shiitake mushrooms do not have to be buried [Photo: homi / Shutterstock.com]

Harvest mushrooms properly

If the first fruiting bodies finally show up on the tree trunks, it will soon be time to harvest. At the latest when the edges of the mushroom hats tear and curve upwards or the spores that have already fallen off collect on the wood, the fruit bodies should migrate into the kitchen. To do this, you either cut the mushrooms with a sharp knife on the stem or twist them off with a slight movement. Now nothing stands in the way of culinary enjoyment from your own garden. Fried, as a risotto or fresh, the forest dwellers enrich our menu in a variety of ways.

If you want to know how to Grow mushrooms on coffee grounds have a look at our special article here.