Recently built my first garden and filled it with soil and plants!

I mixed in chicken manure with the top few inches, then topped with wood mulch.

The next day, it started raining and didn’t stop for 3 days. Now my garden has all these cute little guys!

Is my garden telling me something? Of course it’s got a lot of moisture right now, but anything else I should do?

Remove them I assume?

by mikeywhatwhat

37 Comments

  1. Shienvien

    All’s good, the mushrooms are just making the nutrients from mulch and manure more available to your plants. Enjoy your cute little shrooms.

  2. Fast_Most4093

    you have undigested wood on the surface providing food to fungi.

  3. You can leave them…it’s telling you that your soil is healthy, and once they dry out, they just biodegrade and become food for the microbes and whatnot in the soil.

  4. Grandgardener

    Do not need to remove, fungus usually take nutrients from decaying material likely the wood chips. They will.help break down large material and add nutrients to the system. No need to do anything, all the plants look very healthy. Great job.

  5. CrankyCycle

    Your garden looks great. Is that a square foot garden? If so, you’ll need to be very vigilant about pruning the tomatoes.

  6. lilgraytabby

    You can leave them! It’s a young field of science so there aren’t a lot of hard-and-fast answers, but there is a lot of evidence that fungus in the soil can actually form relationships with plant roots and allow them to efficiently share nutrients to plants that need them most. Now, we don’t know whether that specific mushroom will form relationships like that with tomato (or at least I certainly don’t) but it seems like a wide variety of species can form these relationships. Also, even if you remove the fruiting bodies that you can see, a teaspoon of healthy soil can contain 2 kilometers of mycelium (fungus). So really, you couldn’t get rid of it if you tried.

    Plus I think they look nice 🙂

  7. Impressive-Pin6491

    Fungi are a great sign. You have a living base for your plants!

  8. oneWeek2024

    woodchip mulch and woody material in garden beds –which tend to be moist. result in mushrooms.

    as long as they’re not crowding out actual plants, it won’t matter. they’re just breaking down the woody material.

  9. Crafty-Run-6559

    The oregano is plotting it’s takeover.

    If you let it flower, it will sprout everywhere in your yard/garden next year.

  10. Kyrie_Blue

    “Great work, and thanks for the decomposing wood to eat”

  11. idkmyusernameagain

    Just a heads up- it looks like your sun gold may actually be multiple plants. Nurseries often do this to make the plant look fuller- or so there’s still a sellable plant if one or more seedling dies. Next year you probably want to thin down to one plant

  12. It’s telling you that it’s very wet and you used woodchips. Completely neutral. Not good, not bad. Normal.

  13. Turkey_Moguls

    You have fairies! 🧚🏼‍♂️🧚🏼‍♂️

  14. moparman8289

    There is a fungus among us. But it’s ok I hear he’s a pretty fungi.

  15. Curi0usJ0e

    Lots of organic matter. Btw didn’t know hot and spicy oregano is a thing…do they taste hot and spicy?

  16. spaetzlechick

    Normal, healthy fungal growth. It looks like you’re using colored brown mulch? I’d stay away from colored mulch, go for natural hardwood, cypress or cedar mulch.

  17. speppers69

    I usually get those when it’s shady and moist. Usually in the early part of the growing season. They fade after it starts getting hot except in my mostly shade areas. It takes good organic material to grow and is definitely considered healthy.

    Just in case you’re wondering how they got there…

    Many commercially available composts have mushroom compost mixed in and/or mycelium fungus introduced to help with composting. Mushroom spores like the shrooms you find in your lawn also come from neighboring yards in the wind. As well as store/nursery bought seedlings often have spores in their seedling soils. Sometimes if you are looking at store bought potting soils that have forest materials…you will see long-ish white stringy matter clinging to wood particles. That is often mycelium fungus. Excellent stuff for your vegetable gardens.

  18. Zealousideal_Dig8570

    Those are mushrooms and it’s actually telling you that your soil is healthy! It will automatically disappear, enjoy them while you can

  19. Daveyfiacre

    Most Mushrooms are friends and wanted in the garden, a sign of healthy diverse soil

  20. HouBlastros

    Your garden is telling you it needs more dakka

  21. Nobody-Inhere

    “Thank you for feeding me such delicious food!” – your garden

  22. thecarolinelinnae

    I wish I had these cute ones. We have a colony of Nidularia, aka birds nest fungi in ours, and they are the most trypophobia-inducing shooms… euchgh.

  23. Public_Gardener

    Is this 1 tomato plant with branches buried or 3 tomatoes that were never thinned?

  24. They’re beneficials for the most part. While the wood chips will encourage them, the chips can also deplete soil of nitrogen if left to their own devices, as that’s a big component in breaking them down. As long as the herbs and veggies stay occasionally fertilized (not too much) you should have great rewards! Nice work!

  25. you have good healthy soil. Its a very good thing

Write A Comment