New lazy 04 kitchen garden

Agriculture and soil. Pollution control, soil remediation, humus and new agricultural techniques.
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Diabolorent
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Re: New lazy 04 kitchen garden




by Diabolorent » 22/06/18, 08:06

yessss! : Wink:
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Re: New lazy 04 kitchen garden




by Diabolorent » 25/06/18, 09:19

That's it, this time it's on: I lost almost all my shallots and I don't have too much hope for my garlic and onions.
Well, given the fleet that there has been, it only half surprises me.
For the others, tomatoes, zucchini, chard and salads are doing perfectly!

Can't say the same for my peppers and eggplant that are struggling to come out.

Something else.

I find almost everywhere around my land, mainly in the forest, a kind of mushroom, well I think:

Here on a tree stump ...

Blob.JPG


... but I also have it on one of the vines : Shock:
Is that what you call Blob? Dangerous or not?

Have a good week !
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Did67
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Re: New lazy 04 kitchen garden




by Did67 » 25/06/18, 09:27

Diabolorent wrote:That's it, this time it's on: I lost almost all my shallots and I don't have too much hope for my garlic and onions.
Well, given the fleet that there has been, it only half surprises me.
For the others, tomatoes, zucchini, chard and salads are doing perfectly!

Can't say the same for my peppers and eggplant that are struggling to come out.



This corresponds in all points to my panorama.

The shallots have "ripened" very quickly and I must pull them out urgently. It would already be done if I didn't want to film this.

Garlic takes on rust.

But, although I haven't harvested yet, I don't think it's "lost". It is necessary to tear off and dry. I took out a few of them while visiting a group on Saturday and while the season will have been short, it's not ridiculous (although it's not "mahousse" either).
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Re: New lazy 04 kitchen garden




by Did67 » 25/06/18, 09:39

Diabolorent wrote:... but I also have it on one of the vines : Shock:
Is that what you call Blob? Dangerous or not?

Have a good week !


No no. It looks like a mushroom.

I am not a mycologist (specialist in mushrooms), but he is a "beast" fungus of the "saprophytic" type. A "digester" of dead wood.

The saprophytes are the most numerous fungi. They feed on already dead organic matter. Where a parasite feeds on living matter and therefore creates a "disease". They are usually seen in the forest.

There are thousands and thousands of species of saprophytic fungi, which recycle wood.

It intrigues me on your vine, unless it is on a dead part. In the event of injury, saprophytes can develop on the "heart" of the ligneous plants, which are, I recall, dead [the inside of a trunk of a living tree is made of dead wood; only the outer layer - the sapwood - is alive]. This is how "hollow" trunks are formed, some of which house small chapels, etc ...

https://photo.geo.fr/photos-10-arbres-r ... eur-398157

[see, down, the yew of Saint-Ursin]

Generally, a saprophyte poses no danger.

[PS: But it is also useless to "import" them into the garden, as some permaculturists do, on the grounds that this favors mycorrhizae. Mycorrhizae are very specific fungi of a particular family, the glomeromycetes, and they are strictly "symbiotic" - therefore never saprophytic. This not only contains different species, but different genera. There is as much in common between such and such a species of mycorrhizal fungi and such saprophytic fungi as between a man and an emperor penguin!]

[PS2: Basically, these saprophytes do a recycling job that is absolutely essential to maintaining life: they "dismantle" the wood, substances that bacteria and worms do not attack, and release carbon and minerals - little - that he imprisoned, so that new plants could develop. Far from the negative side that we project on a "rot", it is an essential mechanism]
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Diabolorent
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Re: New lazy 04 kitchen garden




by Diabolorent » 25/06/18, 10:24

Yes even if some men are imperial penguins : Cheesy: : Cheesy: : Cheesy:

OK thank you Did, I would watch this closely so as not to be invaded.

In fact, the fungus on my vine is high, on a large branch, but nothing on the stem itself.
This is the first year that I have noticed such a proliferation of this fungus. There are plenty of undergrowth, especially on the pines.

Particularly watered year : Mrgreen:
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Re: New lazy 04 kitchen garden




by Did67 » 25/06/18, 13:50

Yes, this is most likely related to the "tropical" period that we have known. This mushroom must particularly like it.
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Re: New lazy 04 kitchen garden




by Did67 » 25/06/18, 13:54

Quick search: it would be a Trametes !

http://mycorance.free.fr/valchamp/coriolacees.htm

Probably this one [to check: smell aniseed !]:

http://mycorance.free.fr/valchamp/champi767.htm
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Re: New lazy 04 kitchen garden




by Diabolorent » 25/06/18, 16:39

Cool !!! A mushroom that smells like pastaga !! : Lol: : Lol:
I shouldn't have trouble recognizing this smell : Mrgreen:

Thanks for looking : Wink:

Edit: weird to see a picking period for an inedible mushroom : Shock:
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Re: New lazy 04 kitchen garden




by Did67 » 25/06/18, 18:30

Diabolorent wrote:
Edit: weird to see a picking period for an inedible mushroom : Shock:


No doubt this is a standard format for cards. And that in the broad sense, "picking" is to be understood "full development" ....
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Re: New lazy 04 kitchen garden




by guibnd » 25/06/18, 23:28

Diabolorent wrote:Cool !!! A mushroom that smells like pastaga !! : Lol: : Lol:
I shouldn't have trouble recognizing this smell : Mrgreen:

Thanks for looking : Wink:

Edit: weird to see a picking period for an inedible mushroom : Shock:

It depends ... if it's to offer : Twisted: : Mrgreen:
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