BEEKEEPING LEARNING CENTER > NATURAL & ORGANIC BEEKEEPING METHODS
The benefits of wood-rotting fungi
paus:
I have many many dead trees on my place. Years ago I would cut them if there was any firewood in them but now I leave them for the woodpeckers and now for the fungi after reading this post. I have several pileated woodpeckers in these trees, and I have seen them eating dead bees in front of hives. Looks like a win, win situation.
Seeb:
looks like I have my work cut out for me with boning-up on all the new things I'm reading about in this thread. First of all, thank you Al Stein for posting this information.
FG - since I grow a lot heirloom vegetables, tomatoes, cukes, etc and am in a hot and humid climate as well, I'm very interested in using Smilax as an anti-fungal - and I have a ready supply of it.
yes2matt:
--- Quote from: FloridaGardener on April 26, 2019, 01:31:52 am ---I've already been using Smilax (Greenbriar weed, a/k/a Sasparilla) as anti-fungal for plants in my garden. I live in the wettest part of Florida and need antifungals. I just throw a couple of Smilax roots in a 5-gal bucket of water for a week, then pour the orange water into a pump sprayer. It's free non-toxic fungicide, and when you're done, you can use the rest for root beer. lol!
--- End quote ---
Whoa, wait a minute. I know what smilax is (wanna see my scratched up ankles?) but I didn't know that was Sarsaparilla. Nor a fungicide. It's super humid here too (I have a big pond) and I don't use any -icides, so I'll have to check this out.
As for my bees, there's plenty of rotten woods, tho no birch, around so maybe that helps. I'm starting to have extra motivation to build a hugelkultur bed.
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