Seasonal Activity Calendar
Mushroom cultivation and foraging follow seasonal rhythms that, if respected, produce reliably better outcomes than ignoring them. This hub maps what to prioritise each quarter — whether you are growing indoors, hunting wild species, or managing your dried stock between seasons.
Spring (March–May)
- Soil temperatures rising above 10°C trigger early fungal activity; scout familiar patches after first warm rains
- UK: St George’s mushrooms fruit April–May on chalk and limestone grassland; morels appear near elm and ash in disturbed soil
- For cultivators: ideal time to start new substrate runs — ambient temps reduce heating costs; humidity naturally higher
- Spawn prep: order grain or agar supplies before the main foraging season creates supply delays
- Check stored winter material for moisture intrusion or desiccant saturation; replace silica gel packs if the indicator beads have changed colour
Summer (June–August)
- Heat is the primary challenge: ambient temperatures above 27°C stall colonisation and promote contamination
- Use a temperature-controlled grow space; a simple reptile mat + thermostat can maintain 22–24°C even in hot rooms
- Increase fresh air exchange frequency to offset CO2 buildup in warmer, denser air
- Wild foraging is largely quiet in midsummer except after exceptional rainfall in cool coastal regions
- Use summer for jar and bag preparation, agar plate practice, and isolation work that doesn’t rely on ambient fruiting conditions
Autumn (September–November)
- Peak season for wild species across temperate regions; October is often the single best month in the UK and Pacific Northwest US
- Ideal foraging conditions: nighttime temperatures dropping below 10°C, followed by mild rainy days (10–15°C), then clearing
- Harvest indoor grows in rapid succession — fruiting bodies pin and mature quickly in autumn humidity
- Drying at scale: a food dehydrator at 35–45°C is essential; do not use oven drying above 50°C (heat degrades psilocybin)
- Vacuum seal dried material immediately; autumn humidity can re-hydrate improperly stored specimens within days
Winter (December–February)
- Outdoor foraging largely halts; indoor cultivators must manage heating costs and low ambient humidity
- Long-term storage optimisation: transfer sealed material to a dark, stable-temperature location (below 18°C ideal)
- Vacuum-sealed dried material at room temperature retains potency 6–12 months; frozen (vacuum-sealed) retains 2+ years
- Equipment maintenance: inspect pressure cookers, replace gaskets, deep-clean grow tents and exhaust filters
- Planning season: research new genetics, order spawn, update your tracking journal, and set season goals for the spring flush
Weather Indicators
For foraging, track: rainfall in the preceding 5 days, nighttime lows (ideally 7–13°C), daytime highs (14–18°C), and relative humidity above 80%. These conditions, combined with the right substrate and habitat, are the strongest predictors of productive fruiting in wild environments.
Storage & Preservation
Fully dried (cracker-dry, not pliable) material in a UV-blocking airtight container with food-grade desiccant. Store away from light and heat sources. Label with date and source. Check desiccant indicators every 3 months. See the Winter Storage guide for detailed potency retention data.
Safety & Compliance
Seasonal cautions: autumn slips on muddy terrain, early darkness shortening safe foraging windows, and cold-weather dehydration. Respect SSSI (Sites of Special Scientific Interest) and National Park restrictions on collection. Always carry a detailed map and charge your phone before heading out.
FAQ
- How soon after rain should I forage? Typically 24–72 hours after rainfall, when temperatures remain mild (10–15°C). Too soon and fruiting bodies haven’t emerged; too late in hot weather and they spoil rapidly.
- Can I grow indoors during summer heat? Yes, but you need temperature management. A mini-split AC or a basement grow space below 24°C ambient makes summer cultivation viable. Without it, contamination rates climb sharply above 27°C.
- What is the most valuable off-season activity? For most growers, winter is the time to deepen mycology knowledge — agar work, isolation practice, genetics sourcing — rather than trying to force fruiting against seasonal conditions.
- How long does properly dried material retain potency? Cracker-dry material sealed with desiccant at room temperature: 6–12 months. Vacuum-sealed and frozen: 2+ years. The main enemy is moisture, not time.
- Are these seasonal patterns different in Southern Hemisphere climates? Yes — the calendar is reversed. Australian and South American seasons follow the reverse cycle; the biological principles (temperature, humidity, rainfall) remain identical.