Erik Lomen

Aug 19 at 02:25 PM

looking slick mang!!!

Aug 19 at 02:24 PM

That's why we make em! There is something to getting the combo down in the processing that makes for insanely fast h20 uptake!  

Aug 19 at 02:23 PM

So basic boiler water treatment can consist of a softener, carbon scrubber and chemical injection. but softening and carbon scrubbing is usually adequate to extend the life of an element or fire tubes. Sioux has an inline water treatment system that's essentially a treatment puck that slowly dissolves in X number of gallons of inline water feed. That particular treatment cup and puck isn't meant specifically for Sioux and can benefit any boiler system. We can make an episode on this in due time to expand on steam generation if folks are interested. I usually point folks in two directions for extracts. If you like Soxhlet extracts go with Fruiting Bodies out of MA. Roger is the nicest dude. For UltraSonic methods go with MycoLove out of Colorado...amazing folks and interesting intersections of methods of extraction. These two companies are serious as hell about their extract game and come highly recommended by many others than just me.

Aug 19 at 02:09 PM

Hell ya so stoked the content is helping you and getting you stoked...we can definitely do a short video on agar cubes submerged in h2O in slants, that's a cool one. The real trick to that is not over tightening the cap of the slant and wrapping parafilm around it. KOM is certainly fast as a mutha! We will get on making that flick as well! Thank you for the suggestions

Jul 10 at 12:02 PM

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Dude, the traffic in Maine was something else! Riding two wheeled deathtraps was not advisable but we did it anyways!

Mar 28 at 03:43 PM

I do love books, perhaps in the future this will be a thing! One thing our new website will contain is a lot more of this in writing for quick references, but the organization of all the info is a tough one thats for sure!

Mar 28 at 03:41 PM

Yea the sound is something we are working on! Thanks for yall patience as we gear up with better equipment and settings for these tender little buggers we call mics.

Mar 28 at 03:37 PM

So two variables to consider in this phenomenon Ive seen is incubation time and depth of the cut. If you get erinaceus thicken out a bit more in incubation the mycelium is a bit stronger than introducing to fruiting too early. The other variable is depth of cut, I think a lot of folks are comfortable with how the chestnut likes to be brutalized like a bdsm groupie but lions need less of a disruption to the block to grow properly. Its usually why you will see the denser connections towards the exterior of the incision holding fast and tough while the middle of the worm wiggles free from the sub. There are plenty more factors but these two are major ones that change the outcome.  

Mar 28 at 03:32 PM

That is slick man! Solid work! Those gate valves are such an interesting contraption to deal with!

Mar 28 at 03:30 PM

BenJamin Harder Twin Arbor Laboratories does a bunch of this type of testing, Forrest and his wife who own the company are doing a bunch of really cool stuff with novel Hericium testing for different compound concentrations