Mushroom Agar Grow Mushrooms (cultivation) How to grow mushrooms in a bucket

How to grow mushrooms in a bucket

Growing mushrooms in a bucket is one of the simplest and cheapest methods for beginners. It works especially well for fast-growing species like Oyster Mushroom.


🪣 What You Need

  • 5-gallon plastic bucket with lid
  • Drill (½–1 inch holes)
  • Mushroom spawn (grain spawn)
  • Straw or hardwood pellets
  • Large pot or container for pasteurizing
  • Clean water

Step 1: Drill Holes in the Bucket

Drill holes around the sides of the bucket.

Guidelines

  • Hole size: ½–1 inch
  • Space holes every 3–4 inches
  • Make rows around the bucket

These holes allow the mushrooms to fruit out of the sides.


Step 2: Pasteurize the Substrate

Most bucket growers use straw because it’s cheap and easy.

Straw pasteurization

  1. Chop straw into 2–4 inch pieces.
  2. Pour hot water (160–170°F / 70–75°C) over it.
  3. Let soak for about 1 hour.
  4. Drain until damp but not dripping.

This kills most competing organisms like Trichoderma.


Step 3: Layer Spawn and Straw

Inside the bucket, add layers:

  1. Straw layer
  2. Mushroom spawn
  3. Straw layer
  4. Spawn

Repeat until the bucket is full.

Use about 10–20% spawn compared to the substrate.


Step 4: Let It Colonize

Put the lid on and store the bucket in a warm dark place.

Ideal conditions:

  • Temperature: 65–75°F
  • Time: 10–14 days

White mycelium will spread through the straw.


Step 5: Start Fruiting

Once the straw turns mostly white:

Move the bucket to a humid area with fresh air and light.

Good options:

  • Bathroom
  • Grow tent
  • Shaded outdoor area

Mist the bucket 1–2 times per day.


Step 6: Harvest

Mushrooms will grow out of the holes in clusters.

Harvest when:

  • Caps are fully formed
  • Edges are just starting to flatten

Twist the cluster off gently.


Expected Yield

From one 5-gallon bucket you can usually get:

  • 2–4 pounds of mushrooms
  • 2–3 flushes over several weeks

Common Beginner Mistakes

  • Too wet substrate (causes mold)
  • Not enough spawn
  • Poor airflow
  • Holes drilled too small

💡 Pro Tip:
Blue or pink varieties of Oyster Mushroom are the fastest colonizers, which helps them outcompete contamination.


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