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Mycelium Inoculation Technique

This is a significant add-on of the PF-Tek which enables you to grow virtually
hundreds of PF-cakes with only one spore syringe! Also the primordia will
appear in as little as 16 days after inoculation! The key is first to colonize a
sterilized rye jar and then use this mycelium to make a mycelium syringe.

For the first part I basically use the The Foolproof Psilocybe cubensis
Mycelial Culture Technique.

I use 100g (3,2 ounces) rye + 105 g water + a knife tip of gypsum(optional)
in a 450 ml (1 pint) jar.
For more detail on grain preparation read Grain for Simple Minds.

There is way to prevent airborne contamination entering the jars. Take a


clean plastic bag and spray the inner side with Lysol or alcohol. Rub it from
outside so the Lysol is evenly dispersed on the inner surface of the bag.
When the sterilization time is over, wait a few minutes for the pressure to
build down to ambient. Then take a clean, folded cloth or thick gloves, open
the cooker and transfer the (careful, burning hot!) jars to the bag (shake the
rye jars at this stage to distribute th dryer and wetter kernels!).

Roll the rest of the bag together, so you get it pretty airtight.
As the hot air in the jars is cooling down and its volume decreases, fresh
(contaminated!) air from outside is drawn in. This setup will accomplish that
the contaminants from the air set down on the wet bag surface and don't
come into the jars!

The sterilization time should be 1 hour to assure complete sterilization. You


should shake the rye jars immediately after spore inoculation and than once
after 3-4 days and optionally again after 8 days. The optimum room
temperature for incubation is about 27°C (80°F).

Now comes the best part!


After the rye jars are completely colonized you will need:
At least one empty plastic syringe with needle, 10ml or more
A small (app. 200 ml) jar with a screw lid (I take one from a spaghetti
sauce)
Tin foil
Alcohol lamp
A tea spoon

Punch a hole with a small nail into the middle of the lid. It has to be big
enough for the needle of the syringe fits through. Fill the jar with app. twice
the amount of water you will need to fill the syringes. (for instance when you
have three syringes with each 10 ml to fill, use app. 60 ml water). Screw the
lid on and cover with a double layer of tin foil, sterilize in a pressure cooker
for 30 minutes and then handle according to the above tips.

After the water jar has cooled down to room temperature prepare everything
for the transfer of the colonized rye to the water filled jar.
Wash your hands, clean the working surface, take the colonized rye jar,
loosen the lid of the water jar, but don't take it off yet. Sterilize the already
washed and Lysol-sprayed spoon over the flame of the alcohol lamp. I use to
cool the hot spoon by dipping it in a small glass of alcohol, but you can also
wait a few moments the spoon cools down. Than open the rye jar, the water
jar and transfer 2 spoon full of colonized rye to the water jar. This should
obviously best be done under sterile conditions(in front of a HEPA filter on in
a glove box) , but if you work fast and in a draft free room you should
accomplish this without contaminating the whole jar. Replace the lids back
and screw them tight. The rye jar can be kept in a fridge at least three
months and be used over and over again.

Take the water jar, put a finger on the tin foil where the hole is and shake it
vigorously at least 3 minutes until you see many tiny mycelium pieces
swimming in the water. Take a clean, sterilized syringe, sterilize the tip of the
needle over the flame and pull (holding the needle still in the flame) the
plunger back 4 millimeters (1/5 inch). This will give you a little air bubble so
later on you can shake the mycelium water prior to inoculation of the PF jars.

Remove the tin cover, hold the jar at an angle, insert the needle into water
and pull the plunger until the syringe is full. Be careful the syringe needle is
clean and sterilized or you will contaminate the mycelium water.

That's it! You can now use this syringe like you would use the spore-water
one. You can keep the mycelium syringes in the fridge at least 2 months.

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Page last modified on April 15, 2008, at 03:41 PM

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