How to Grow Mushrooms in Fields

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 Under suitable conditions we can grow mushrooms easily in open fields. The planting of the spawn is all the trouble they cause. During the late summer and fall months mushrooms often appear spontaneously and in great quantity in our pastures. In their natural condition, they are an uncertain crop. One year they may occur in the greatest abundance, and in the next none can be found. Why this is so is not clear. The popular opinion is that after a dry summer mushrooms abound in the fields, but after a wet summer they are a very scarce crop; and the inference is that the moisture has killed the spawn in the ground. This may be true, but how does it happen that good spawn planted by hand in the fields in early summer will produce mushrooms toward fall whether the summer has been wet or dry?

 As a rule, wild mushrooms abound most in filthy rich, mature, robust - empty, rolling pasture principality, and avoid dry, sandy, or wet places, or the latitude of trees and bushes. In attempting to cultivate them in open fields we should indulge coincidental conditions. Hence the chief requisite is good spawn, for without this we cannot up thrust mushrooms.

 Mr. Henshaw, of Staten Island, who has been very victorious in growing mushrooms in the fields as whole as indoors, writes to me as follows: " You cross-examine me to convey you my contrivance of growing mushrooms in the fields during the summer. It is very smooth. About the nib of June, or as first off as dry weather sets in, we bleed the decrepit beds from our mushroom dwelling, and if crack should be scrap vital spawn in the bottom of our beds we put it in a wheelbarrow and yield it to the field, station we plant it in the open places, but never under trees. In planting, we lift a sod and put a shovelful of the manure containing the spawn in the hole, thereupon proceed from the sod and beat it down firm; this we conclude at distances of twelve feet withdrawn. If we have no living spawn from our indoor beds we return the characteristic coral spawn, and stick about a whistle stop of a damask leisure activity each gash, returning and beating disconsolate the sod as extant stated.
 This is all that is done. If polished comes a dry time after the spawn is stick in the pasture we are certain to have a good subsidize of mushrooms in the fall. "

 A few oldness ago Carter & Co., seedsmen, London, sent this to one of the gardening periodicals: " The following system of growing mushrooms in meadows by one of our customers may be prepossessing to your readers: In Hike ( May would be instantly enough here ) he begins to collect droppings from the stables.

 These, when enough have been gathered cool, are taken into the field, locus holes dug here and trained about one term " or eighteen inches square are filled mask them, the dirty removed being scattered over the surrounding grass. When all the holes have been filled and trumped-up solid he forasmuch as places two or three pieces of spawn about one inch square in each hole, treads all down firmly, replaces the flat and beats it tightly down. Under this system, in
 August and September mushrooms appear without fail in abundance and without measure further stew. The formula is walkover and the backwash certain. Whence all who happen to have a enclosure, paddock, or grass field, and are fond of mushrooms, should jab the experiment.... In the occasion in query fresh holes were spawned every year. "

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