Those who should grow mushrooms.
Market Gardeners.- The
mushroom is a highly prized article of food which
can be as easily grown as many other vegetable products
of the soil and with as much pleasure and
profit. Below it is shown, in particular, that
this peculiar plant is singularly well adapted to the
conditions that surround many classes of persons, and
by whom the mushroom might become a standard crop
for home use, the city market, or both. It is
directly in their line of business; is a winter crop,
requiring their care when outdoor operations are at
a standstill, and they can most conveniently attend
to growing mushrooms. They have the manure needed
for their other crops, and they may well use it first
for a mushroom crop. After having borne a crop
of mushrooms it is thoroughly rotted and in good condition
for early spring crops; and for seed beds of tomatoes,
lettuces, cabbages, cauliflowers, and other vegetables,
it is the best kind of manure.
Years ago market gardening near New
York in winter was carried on in rather a desultory
way, and the supply of salads and other forced vegetables
was limited and mostly raised in hotbeds and other
frames, and prices ran high. But of recent years
our markets in winter have been so liberally supplied
from the Southern States, that, in order to save themselves,
our market gardeners have been compelled to take up
a fresh line in their business, and renounce the winter
frames in favor of greenhouses, and grow crops which
many of them did not handle before. These greenhouses
are mostly long, wide (eighteen to twenty feet), low,
hip-roofed (30 deg.) structures. In most
of them the salad beds are made upon the floor, and
the pathways are sunken a little so as to give headroom
in walking and working. Others of these greenhouses
are built a little higher, and middle and side benches
are erected within them, as in the case of florists’
greenhouses, and with the view of growing salad plants
on these benches as florists do carnations, and mushrooms
under the benches. The mushrooms are protected
from sunlight by a covering of light boards, or hay,
or the space under the benches is entirely shut in,
cupboard fashion, with wooden shutters. The temperature
is very favorable for mushrooms, steady
and moderately cool, and easily corrected by the covering-in
of the beds; and the moisture of the atmosphere of
a lettuce house is about right for mushrooms.
In such a house the day temperature may run up, with
sunshine, to 65 deg. or 70 deg. in winter,
but an artificial night temperature of only 45 deg.
to 50 deg. is maintained. Under these conditions,
with the beds about fifteen inches thick, they should
continue to yield a good crop of short-stemmed, stout
mushrooms for two or three months, possibly longer.
Besides growing the mushrooms in greenhouses
our market gardeners are very much in earnest in cultivating
them in cellars. Some of these cellars are ordinary
barn cellars, others large and commodious have
been built under barns and greenhouses, purposely for
the cultivation of mushrooms. Several of these
mushroom cellars may be found on Long Island between
Jamaica and Woodhaven.
Florists.- In midwinter
the cut flower season is at its height and the florist
endeavors to make all the money out of his greenhouses
that he possibly can; every available inch of space
exposed to the light is occupied by growing plants,
and under the benches alongside of the pathways dahlias,
cannas, caladiums, and other tubers and bulbs
are stored, also ivies, palms, succulents and the
like. In order that the plants may be more fully
exposed to the sunlight, they are grown on benches
raised above the ground so as to bring them near to
the glass; and the greenhouse seems to be full to
overflowing. But right here we have the best
kind of a mushroom house. The space under the
benches, which is nearly useless for other purposes,
is admirably adapted for mushroom beds, and the warmth
and moisture of the greenhouse are exceptionally congenial
conditions for the cultivation of mushrooms.
Florists need the loam and manure anyway, and these
are just as good for potting purposes better
for young stock after having been used in
the mushroom beds than they were before, so that the
additional expense in connection with the crop is
the labor in making the beds and the price of the
spawn. Mushrooms are not a bulky crop; they require
no space or care in summer, are easily grown, handled,
and marketed, and there is always a demand for them
at a good price. If the crop turns out well it
is nearly all profit; if it is a complete failure very
little is lost, and it must be a bad failure that
will not yield enough to pay for its cost. Why
should the florist confine himself to one crop at a
time in the greenhouse when he may equally well have
two crops in it at the same time, and both of them
profitable? He can have his roses on the benches
and mushrooms under the benches, and neither interferes
with the other. Let us take a very low estimate:
In a greenhouse a hundred feet long make a five foot
wide mushroom bed under the main bench; this will give
500 square feet of bed, and half a pound to the foot
will give 250 pounds of mushrooms, which, sold at
fifty cents a pound net, brings $125. This amount
the florist would not have realized without growing
the mushrooms.
Private Gardeners.- It
is a part of their routine duty, and success in mushroom
growing is as satisfactory to themselves as it is gratifying
to their employers. Fresh mushrooms, like good
fruit and handsome flowers, are a product of the garden
that is always acceptable. One of the principal
pleasures in having a large garden and keeping a gardener
consists in being able to give to others a part of
the choicest garden products.
In most pretentious gardens there
is a regular mushroom house, and the growing of mushrooms
is an easy matter; in others there is no such convenience,
and the gardener has to trust to his own ingenuity
where and how he is to grow the mushrooms. But
so long as he has an abundance of fresh manure he
can usually find a place in which to make the beds.
In the tool-shed, the potting-shed, the wood-shed,
the stoke-hole, the fruit-room, the vegetable-cellar,
or in some other out-building he can surely find a
corner; or, handier still, convenient room under the
greenhouse benches, where he can make some beds.
Failing all of these he can start in August or September
and make beds outside, as the London market gardeners
do.
In fruit-forcing houses, especially
early graperies, gardeners have a prejudice against
growing any other plants than the grapevines lest red
spiders, thrips, or mealy bugs are introduced with
the plants, but in the case of mushrooms no such grounds
are tenable. As the vines have yielded their
fruit by midsummer and ripened their wood early so
as to be ready for starting into growth again in December
or January, the grapery is kept cool and ventilated
in the fall and early winter, but this need not interfere
with the mushroom crop. Box up the beds or make
them in frames inside the grapery; the warm manure
will afford the mushrooms heat enough until it is
time to start the vines, when the increased temperature
and moisture of the house will be in favor of the
mushrooms because of the declining heat in the manure
beds. The mushrooms have no deleterious effect
whatever upon the vines, nor have the vines upon the
mushrooms.
Village People and Suburban Residents.- Those
who keep horses should, at least, grow mushrooms for
their own family use and, if need be, for market as
well. They are so easily raised, and they take
up so little space that they commend themselves particularly
to those who have only a village or suburban lot,
and, in fact, only a barn. And they are not a
crop for which we have to make a great preparation
and need a large quantity of manure. No matter
how small the bed may be, it will bear mushrooms;
and if we desire we can add to the bed week after week,
as our store of manure increases, and in this way
keep up a continuous succession of mushrooms.
A bed may be made in the cow-house or horse-stable,
the carriage-house, barn-cellar, woodshed, or house-cellar;
or if we can not spare much room anywhere, make a bed
in a big box and move it to where it will be least
in the way. But the best place is, perhaps, the
cellar. An empty stall in a horse-stable is a
capital place, and not only affords room for a full
bed on the floor, but for rack-beds as well.
Farmers.- No one can grow
mushrooms better or more economically than the farmer.
He has already the cellar-room, the fresh manure and
the loam at home, and all he needs is some spawn with
which to plant the beds. Nothing is lost.
The manure, after having been used in mushroom beds,
is not exhausted of its fertility, but, instead, is
well rotted and in a better condition to apply to
the land than it was before being prepared for the
mushroom crop. The farmer will not feel the little
labor that it takes. There is no secret whatever
connected with it, and skilled labor is unnecessary
to make it successful. The commonest farm hand
can do the work, which consists of turning the manure
once every day or two for about three weeks, then
building it into a bed and spawning and molding it.
Nearly all the labor for the next ten or twelve weeks
consists in maintaining an even temperature and gathering
and marketing the crop.
Many women are searching for remunerative
and pleasant employment upon the farm, and what can
be more interesting, pleasant and profitable work
for them than mushroom-growing? After the farmer
makes up the mushroom bed his wife or daughter can
attend to its management, with scarcely any tax upon
her time, and without interfering with her other domestic
duties. And it is clean work; there is nothing
menial about it. No lady in the land would hesitate
to pick the mushrooms in the open fields, how much
less, then, should she hesitate to gather the fresh
mushrooms from the clean beds in her own clean cellar?
Mushrooms are a winter crop; they come when we need
them most. The supply of eggs in the winter season
is limited enough, and pin-money often proportionately
short; but with an insatiable market demand for mushrooms
all winter long, at good prices, no farmer’s
wife need care whether the hens lay eggs at Christmas
or not. When mushroom-growing is intelligently
conducted there is more money in it than in hens,
and with less trouble.