One can also add peroxide to make it harder for mold spores to germinate (obviously only works with mycelium transfers or clones). Combining these would allow only your healthy mycelium to colonize the plate. Make sure to allow the agar to cool below 120 degrees farenheit so the peroxide doesn't disassociate. Also dont add too much. (I forget the right dilution ratio)
@katclaus7425 there's 1000 others that explain the same things, a hell of a lot faster and simpler... this dude makes videos for simple-minded 🤡s and 👶s
Hey did you delete some videos recently. I just watch your mushroom kit review, from shroom supply. I don’t see video anymore..I know it was kind of older but it’s gone can’t find it..
Actually Paul Stamets suggested to pour new agar over the bacteria-contaminated old agar but include gentamycin in that new agar. Then of course you have to transfer the mycelium once it colonizes the new agar , away from the bacteria but also from the antibiotics. That’s basically a combination of the methods mentioned in this vid. Unfortunately the Paul never mentioned any ratios of the antibiotics in the agar mix.
Hey willy how ya been doing lately? Glad to see ur videos again but what are these video episodes u are talkn about? Or is tht the Pateron thing u mentioned?
Literally never had this or any kind of build up on my dishes. I'm rather clean especially for not having a flow hood. I had the nastiest yellow build up looked it up and from what I've seen it's corona. Could be E coli maybe they look fairly similar but it looks like dehydrated piss that's been dried out and was fizzing while drying. So it's bubbly, and a kinda vibrant yellow that's hard to describe. All affected dishes got thrown out so no pics but I mean it caught me off guard a bit. I've never had problems so time for a flow hood I guess. I try to overdue agar anyways just incase I get bad transfers or my jars get nasties from the humidifier. I just redo them when I have to but I'm not doing agar again till I get a flow hood. Lysol spraying a tent used to work so well. Only thing I did different was use a beaker to pour the agar after sterilizing.
@@ironmarkgolf I'm not trying to knock your info but viruses are unable to grow on agar, they need to infect a host cell to replicate. You're probably looking at yeast or some kind of infectious bacteria, similar to when your mucus turns yellow when you're sick
@@ouch2925 idk all I know is when I looked up viruses on agar cause I had never seen this before and usually get 1 or 2 contam out of 30 which to me is really good but the point is I've seen several contams and never seen this yellow build up that looked like if you could burn dehydrated pee. It was bubbled up and very odd yellow