![]() "hope the individual who stole my info gets explosive diarrhea and subsequent hemorrhoids." ![]() Not dead yall still here! I got an email back from seatgeeks saying they'd look into it further etc. Will update weather or not they make it "right" Owner of The Spore Works is supposed to be calling me. called my bank, they can't do anything until it posts tomorrow. I do not give out my card info willie nilly, and very recently got a new card number so I'm 100% sure the dousche bag customer service Ahole stole my info. By 11:30 AM a charge for $562 had been made on my card at a site called. They have you place order online then call to give payment info over the phone. Decided to branch out and try The Spore works. Tried some spores from and was VERY happy with them. The resulting spore pattern is a disc with no gill, pore or spine patterning, of course.Very new to Cultivation. (Hair lacquer is not as good, but it's a lot better than nothing.) Making spore prints from other kinds of fungiīoletoid fungi (those producing their spores within tubes) and Hydnoid fungi (those producing their spores on spines) can be treated in exactly the same way as gilled fungi, and their spore prints consist of patterns of dots or of rings respectively.Ĭup fungi - for example Peziza species - should be placed with the fertile (inner) surface downwards. Spray the completed spore print with artist's clear varnish. If you want to keep the spore print or to make several such prints for display purposes, you will want to ensure that the spore patterns will not be smudged during handling. ![]() Remove the tumbler and then carefully lift the cap. Here's a useful tip: some small mushrooms tend to dry out very quickly even when covered, but if you place a piece of wet tissue paper on top of the cap you will avoid this problem. Leave the tumbler in place for two or three hours. Place a tumbler on top of the cap to prevent it from drying out. If you intend looking at the spores under a microscope, then whatever colour the spores are making the spore print on a microscope slide or (better still) a slide cover slip is ideal. This works okay for mushrooms whose spores are not white! For white-spored mushrooms use black paper or clear plastic or glass. Place the cap, gills downwards, on white paper. Some stems snap easily from the cap, but in most instances it is best to cut the stem using a scalpel or a very sharp knife. Remove the stem so that when you turn the cap over the gills will make close contact with the paper. The particular colour of the spore print can help you narrow down the number of possibilities in your quest to identify the specimen to species level. For example in the family Russulaceae some genera have whitish spores while others have yellow spores, ochre spores etc. In some families there is a range of spore colours. The colour of the spores, when seen en masse, is one of the best ways of determining which mycological family the specimen belongs to - for example the Amanitaeae (which have whitish spores), Cortinariaceae (which have rust-brown spores), Entolomataceae (which have pinkish spores) etc. One of the main reasons for making a spore print of a mushroom or any other kind of fungus is to help in the process of identification.
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