lightingnerd

joined 1 year ago
[–] lightingnerd 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I love this thing that people forget about open source. Like the whole FreeCAD community, there's a whole group of people who don't even use the vanilla UI--because they don't have to, haha! Of course, it does take skill, but if you're skilled enough to make pull request...

[–] lightingnerd 29 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Yeah, I'm a Reddit refugee, and I heard a bunch of people complaining about there being no "centralized login", and I'm like--bruh, that's WHY WE MOVED HERE, lmao!

[–] lightingnerd 2 points 1 year ago

Random trivia: it's actually not the liquid water that matters, it's the water vapor due to the pressure-temperature relationship of water in the gas phase (since gasses are significantly more compressible than liquids). It's also important to note that water vapor does not behave like an ideal gas above ~1.5PSI, and it has a different temperature-pressure curve than gasses like N2, O2, and CO2, which is why you need to purge air at the beginning of the canning process in order to achieve a high enough temperature.

...and yeah, it's crazy how altitude and atmospheric pressure matters, the weight of the air around us is literally pushing down on the rocker weight, affecting the relative internal pressure.

Thermodynamics is pretty awesome! XD

[–] lightingnerd 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

When I use the word "expanding", I am referring to "increasing in volume". So you could just "expand your spawn" (making more spawn), or "expand to bulk" (inoculating your fruiting blocks). Oh, and definitely try to find actual fuel pellets if you can, they're usually much cheaper per pound than food-grade BBQ smoking pellets. I have found the basic fuel pellets at stores like Tractor Supply Hardware, but you have to ask an employee to check the stock in the back (since they're out of season).

If you do end-up buying hardwood smoking pellets, be wary that some smoking pellets can contain additives like molasses, which means too much sugar for basic pasteurization with Lipa's Tek--so always check the ingredients with smoker pellets.

[–] lightingnerd 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (4 children)

A cheap and easy method for expanding spawn is Lipa's Tek. Renegade Mushrooms goes over the method in this youtube video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HD_k-dAyE5Y

Basically a 40 pound bag of Hardwood Fuel Pellets (make sure they're hardwood) can go for around 6-7USD. If you're in a pinch, want a specific species of tree, or want certified organic, you can find hardwood pellets for smoking meats that go for somewhere around 0.50USD/lb in 20-40lb bags.

The reason this method works is that fuel pellets have less sugars and starches, and they are already partially pasteurized in the pellet press. So, as long as your pellets are stored well, a two-hour pasteurization at 200F is more than enough to get rid of most of the competing organisms. This is especially true of Pleurotus sp. (the Oysters), and from what I've heard, Hericium sp. (Lion's Mane, etc), but I'm currently waiting on some Pholiota adiposa (Chestnut) to fruit that seemed to do well in pasteurized HWFP.

Give it a try, it's a lot cheaper in terms of dollar cost, energy use, and time than wet-sterilizing in a small Pressure Cooker--but it's best for expanding from spawn into more spawn or for bulking. You won't get the same sized flushes as with something like grain or Master's Mix, but you can easily whip up a lot more substrate--so it all comes out in the wash. I just retired 6 spent bags of P. ostreatus and they all seemed to do pretty well, and fruited more than once.

[–] lightingnerd 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Thanks for the recommendation, I just finished watching it--and yeah that speaks volumes (quite literally, haha!). I love how they started off the episode with a very fluent mixture of non-English and a few English phrases.

I should really go back and revisit TNG! I remember watching it as a kid, but now that I have a few decades under my belt, I've gone back and watched a few episodes: and it really is packed with amazing philosophy and social commentary.

[–] lightingnerd 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Indeed, indeed! Diversity is one of the strongest traits of human life (and life in-general).

I don't recall that episode, I'll have to go watch it!

[–] lightingnerd 10 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Vlad is just a global embarrassment at this point.

[–] lightingnerd 3 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Oh that's a really great method! I used to know a guy with ASD who did kind-of the inverse, he was super familiar with reading (specifically the bible), but he had a hard time with conversations. So he learned how to use the bible as a medium to conduct conversation.

Really, really cool discussions were born from that, and by the time I met him, he was almost independently conducting conversation, only going back to certain bible references when he got stuck or he needed to borrow a story or metaphor.

[–] lightingnerd 6 points 1 year ago (6 children)

Yeah, definitely an ADD/Attention-Processing issue. I used to read a lot as a kid, and after a head injury that aggravated my ADD and years of reading and talking in short-form messages (SMS, twitter, etc), it took me FOREVER to re-learn the skill of reading long-form text.

Luckily, with practice comes mastery, I was able to regain my abilities to read, and I'm currently working on a few textbooks and two casual books. It's still a struggle in distracting environments (loud children, hospitals, etc), but it's getting better the more I read.

[–] lightingnerd 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

Oh that is very interesting! I guess the main way that they decompose is through PHA depolymerase--according to ChatGPT a lot of the species that have been tested in the decomposition of PHA are bacteria. It would be interesting to try inoculating some samples of PHA with different mushroom species as well. It would be really great if PHA could be fully-decomposed into proper food-safe compost.

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