Zone 5 · Mushrooms Growing Guide
A striking white pom-pom mushroom prized for its seafood-like flavour and brain health benefits. Grown indoors on hardwood sawdust blocks. More temperature-sensitive than oysters but worth it.
Indoor crop — no outdoor planting or frost dates needed. Grow year-round with the right substrate, temperature, and humidity.
Grow indoors in any zone. Temperature control matters more than your USDA zone -- aim for 65-75°F during colonisation and 60-70°F during fruiting.
Zone 5 is split into two subzones. The a/b distinction affects your exact last frost date by 1–2 weeks -- meaningful for heat-sensitive crops and fruit tree hardiness.
| Subzone | Last frost | First fall | Season | Min temp |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5a | May 5 | Oct 11 | ~158 days | -20 to -15°F |
| 5b | Apr 25 | Oct 17 | ~173 days | -15 to -10°F |
plant detects your subzone from your location and adjusts planting windows accordingly.
Here is what to expect at each stage — and what to do when you get there.
Keep at the temperature specified for your variety -- this is the most critical variable. Keep away from direct sunlight
Do not disturb. Maintain temperature and humidity. Contamination (green or black patches) means mold -- remove the affec
Introduce fresh air exchange -- open the bag or kit twice daily. Maintain humidity at 85-95%. Pinning is triggered by th
Mist the growing surface 2-3 times daily to maintain humidity. Harvest before the caps fully flatten -- the edges should
After first harvest, soak the substrate in cold water for 12-24 hours to rehydrate, then return to fruiting conditions.
At peak: Lion's mane fruits as dramatic white pom-poms -- visually spectacular
Lion's mane is one of the most striking mushrooms you can grow and has a texture often compared to crab or lobster.
All nutrition comes from the hardwood sawdust substrate. Use a quality grain spawn and supplemented sawdust block for best yields. Cleanliness matters more than feeding.
Start a new block every 3 weeks. Lion's mane typically produces 1-2 flushes per block before being spent. It's one of the more delicate mushrooms in terms of moisture requirements -- it needs high humidity and dislikes direct airflow. Succession blocks keep production going without over-stressing individual blocks. Harvest when the 'teeth' begin to elongate but before they turn yellow, which indicates overmaturity.
Very sensitive to CO2 -- needs good air exchange or teeth become stunted. Supplemented hardwood blocks give best yields.
Something went wrong? Here is what likely happened and what to do differently next time.
What happened: Contamination -- usually Trichoderma (green mold) or Neurospora (pink) -- means competing fungi got established before the mushroom mycelium could colonise the substrate. This usually happens because of poor sterilisation, exposure to air during inoculation, or too high a temperature.
Next season: Work cleanly and quickly when the substrate is exposed. Keep temperature in the right range -- too warm invites contamination. Start fresh with a new kit or properly sterilised substrate.
What happened: Mushrooms pin in response to high humidity and fresh air. If the substrate was fully colonised but no pins appeared, the fruiting conditions were not right -- usually insufficient fresh air exchange or humidity too low.
Next season: Open the kit or bag twice daily for fresh air exchange and mist the surface to maintain 85-95% humidity. The contrast between CO2 buildup and fresh air is what triggers pinning.
What happened: Overwet substrate prevents oxygen reaching the mycelium and creates ideal conditions for bacterial contamination. It can look and smell unpleasant and the mycelium will not grow through it.
Next season: Field capacity is the target moisture level -- squeeze a handful of substrate and only a few drops should come out. Wetter than this is too wet.
What happened: A dried-out substrate stalls colonisation and prevents fruiting. Oyster mushrooms especially need consistent humidity -- if the substrate cracks or feels dry, production stops.
Next season: Mist the growing surface 2-3 times daily during fruiting. Between flushes, soak the substrate in cold water for 12-24 hours to rehydrate it.
What happened: Temperature outside the optimal range for your variety significantly slows or stops growth. Too warm and contamination risk increases dramatically. Too cool and mycelium growth stalls.
Next season: Check the specific temperature requirement for your variety and monitor with a thermometer. A consistent environment is more important than the perfect temperature.
Something didn't work out? Here is what likely happened and what to do differently next season.
What happened: Contamination -- usually Trichoderma (green mold) or Neurospora (pink) -- means competing fungi got established before the mushroom mycelium could colonise the substrate. This usually happens because of poor sterilisation, exposure to air during inoculation, or too high a temperature.
Next season: Work cleanly and quickly when the substrate is exposed. Keep temperature in the right range -- too warm invites contamination. Start fresh with a new kit or properly sterilised substrate.
What happened: Mushrooms pin in response to high humidity and fresh air. If the substrate was fully colonised but no pins appeared, the fruiting conditions were not right -- usually insufficient fresh air exchange or humidity too low.
Next season: Open the kit or bag twice daily for fresh air exchange and mist the surface to maintain 85-95% humidity. The contrast between CO2 buildup and fresh air is what triggers pinning.
What happened: Overwet substrate prevents oxygen reaching the mycelium and creates ideal conditions for bacterial contamination. It can look and smell unpleasant and the mycelium will not grow through it.
Next season: Field capacity is the target moisture level -- squeeze a handful of substrate and only a few drops should come out. Wetter than this is too wet.
What happened: A dried-out substrate stalls colonisation and prevents fruiting. Oyster mushrooms especially need consistent humidity -- if the substrate cracks or feels dry, production stops.
Next season: Mist the growing surface 2-3 times daily during fruiting. Between flushes, soak the substrate in cold water for 12-24 hours to rehydrate it.
What happened: Temperature outside the optimal range for your variety significantly slows or stops growth. Too warm and contamination risk increases dramatically. Too cool and mycelium growth stalls.
Next season: Check the specific temperature requirement for your variety and monitor with a thermometer. A consistent environment is more important than the perfect temperature.
Know what to look for before it gets out of hand — early identification is the most important step.
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Traditional growers have used lunar cycles to time planting and harvest for centuries. The moon affects moisture levels in soil and sap flow in plants.
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