Noosa News
Mushroom farming providing a new direction for some impacted by COVID and drought

A fascination with fungi is helping Queenslanders earn an income after losing work to COVID-19 and the drought.
Key points:
- Interest in mushroom farming is growing, as new growing techniques emege
- Small-scale growers are supplying them to local markets and restaurants
- There’s increasing consumer demand for locally grown produce
Tucked away about 13 kilometres from the Mackay CBD, Samara Galloway and Bret Garrity grow mushrooms in a shipping container, housing stacks of white buckets flooded in blue light.
It is a far cry from what most vegetable farms look like — but everything has been set up for a reason.
“It’s humidity-controlled with a humidifier that’s pumping a whole lot of water into the air,” Ms Galloway said.
“In a…
-
Noosa News20 hours ago
Woman dead and man rushed to hospital with gunshot wound following crash near Aussie World on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast
-
Noosa News21 hours ago
Brisbane-bound traffic diverted after pile-ups along Bruce Highway
-
Noosa News20 hours ago
Man arrested after police chase: Driver shot, woman dies in crash
-
General18 hours ago
Summah Richards, 12, mourned after fatal e-scooter in Laidley, Queensland