Mushroom Growing Guides

North Spore is your trusted source for everything you need to grow mushrooms successfully. Curious beginners and seasoned cultivators alike will find a comprehensive selection of mushroom grow kits, sterile substrates, grain and sawdust spawn, plug spawn, outdoor log kits, grow chambers, and lab supplies crafted with quality and sustainability in mind.

Based in Portland, Maine, North Spore is committed to sustainability, quality control, and helping people everywhere discover the joy of growing mushrooms that are hard to find in grocery stores or farmers markets.

Indoor Mushroom Growing

Grow with a Spray & Grow Kit Grow with a Spray & Grow Kit

Grow with a Spray & Grow Kit

Learn how to grow mushrooms the easy way with a ready-to-fruit kit

Grow with a Fruiting Block Grow with a Fruiting Block

Grow with a Fruiting Block

Learn how to grow mushrooms with a ready-to-fruit block

How to Make a Monotub How to Make a Monotub

How to Make a Monotub

Learn the Monotub method for growing mushrooms indoors in an enclosed tub

How to Make a Martha Tent How to Make a Martha Tent

How to Make a Martha Tent

A comprehensive Martha test setup and maintenance guide.

How to Grow Dung-Loving Mushrooms

Grow in All-in-One Bag Grow in All-in-One Bag

Grow in All-in-One Bag

Learn how to grow mushrooms in a Shroomtek All-in-One Grow Bag

All-in-one bag vs Monotub All-in-one bag vs Monotub

All-in-one bag vs Monotub

Learn which is right for your grow

How to use the 'Boomr Bin' How to use the 'Boomr Bin'

How to use the 'Boomr Bin'

Step-by-step guide to your first flush in a 'Boomr Bin'

Outdoor Mushroom Growing

When and Where to Plant Mushrooms Outdoors When and Where to Plant Mushrooms Outdoors

When and Where to Plant Mushrooms Outdoors

Learn more about when to plant mushrooms in your climate zone

Outdoor Beginner Mushrooms Outdoor Beginner Mushrooms

Outdoor Beginner Mushrooms

Master the basics with these three easy-to-grow mushrooms

Companion Planting with Mushrooms Companion Planting with Mushrooms

Companion Planting with Mushrooms

Learn how to make mushrooms work alongside your vegetables

How to Grow Mushrooms in Buckets & Containers How to Grow Mushrooms in Buckets & Containers

How to Grow Mushrooms in Buckets & Containers

Step-by-step instructions to grow oyster mushrooms in a variety of vessels

Lab Skills

Common Contamination Common Contamination

Common Contamination

Learn what could negatively impact your grow

How to use a NocBox How to use a NocBox

How to use a NocBox

Turn any space into a clean space

Mycology Lab Skills Mycology Lab Skills

Mycology Lab Skills

Plates, Slants, & Liquid Culture

Learn by Species

Species Spotlight: Shiitake Species Spotlight: Shiitake

Species Spotlight: Shiitake

How go grow, identify, and cook shiitake mushrooms

Find, Grow, and Use Turkey Tail Mushrooms Find, Grow, and Use Turkey Tail Mushrooms

Find, Grow, and Use Turkey Tail Mushrooms

Learn more about this globally recognized medicinal mushroom

Grow, Find, and Use Lion's Mane Mushrooms Grow, Find, and Use Lion's Mane Mushrooms

Grow, Find, and Use Lion's Mane Mushrooms

Highly prized as a brain booster, Lion's Mane is easier to grow than find

Find, Grow, and Cook Morel Mushrooms Find, Grow, and Cook Morel Mushrooms

Find, Grow, and Cook Morel Mushrooms

Elusive, mysterious, and prized; learn everything we know about Morels

Getting Started with Mushroom Cultivation

Mushrooms are one of the most rewarding things you can grow at home and it's more accessible than most people expect. Whether you're interested in growing gourmet edibles like oyster mushrooms and shiitake, medicinal species like lion's mane and reishi, or exploring more advanced techniques, this hub has step-by-step guides for every method and experience level.

How Mushrooms Grow: The Basics

Mushrooms are the fruiting bodies of fungi. They grow by colonizing a substrate: an organic material like hardwood sawdust, straw, or composted manure, and then producing fruiting bodies when environmental conditions are right. Every successful grow follows the same four stages:

  • Inoculation: Introducing mushroom spores or mycelium (via syringe or grain spawn) to a sterilized or pasteurized substrate.
  • Colonization: The mycelium spreads through the substrate over 2–4 weeks, depending on species and temperature.
  • Fruiting: Environmental adjustments like increased humidity, fresh air exchange, and light, trigger mushroom development.
  • Harvesting: Mushrooms are collected at peak maturity, typically just before the caps fully flatten out.

Our guides cover each stage in depth, with instructions tailored to different cultivation methods, species, and growing environments.

What You Need to Grow Mushrooms at Home

  • Substrate: The growing medium for your mushrooms. Common options include hardwood sawdust, straw, coco coir, and composted horse manure. The right choice depends on your species.
  • Spawn or Spores: The fungal material that initiates growth. Liquid culture syringes offer faster colonization than spore syringes and are a reliable choice for beginners.
  • Cultivation Container: Monotubs, all-in-one grow bags, outdoor beds, or logs: each method has different tradeoffs in yield, cost, and complexity.
  • Environmental Controls: Most edible and medicinal mushrooms thrive at room temperature (65–75°F) with humidity between 70–95% and indirect light. Basic setups require little more than a spray bottle; automated systems handle humidity and airflow on their own.

North Spore offers a full range of substrates, spawn, and cultivation kits designed to take the guesswork out of each stage.

Which Growing Method Is Right for You?

Not all methods suit all growers. Here's a quick overview of the most common approaches covered in our guides:

  • All-in-one grow bags are the simplest starting point; pre-sterilized, compact, and low-maintenance. Best for beginners or anyone with limited space.
  • Monotub cultivation offers larger yields, reusability, and more control over environmental factors. Better suited to growers ready to scale up or experiment with different species and substrates.
  • Outdoor cultivation uses logs, straw, or wood chips to grow mushrooms alongside companion plants. A low-effort, long-term approach that works well for wood-loving species like shiitake, wine cap, and hen of the woods.

Frequently Asked Questions about Mushroom Cultivation

Blue Oyster mushrooms (Pleurotus ostreatus) are widely considered the most beginner-friendly. They colonize quickly, tolerate a range of conditions, and fruit reliably on simple substrates like straw or hardwood sawdust.

From inoculation to first harvest, most species take 4–8 weeks. Colonization typically takes 2–3 weeks, followed by 1–2 weeks of fruiting once conditions are adjusted. Faster-colonizing species like oyster mushrooms can be ready to harvest in as little as 3–4 weeks.

Spore syringes contain mushroom spores that must germinate before colonization begins. This can add time and introduces some genetic variability. Liquid culture syringes contain active mycelium suspended in a nutrient broth, which colonizes substrates faster and more predictably. For most home growers, liquid culture is the more efficient choice.

Most dung-loving species take around 2–3 weeks to fully colonize. Wood-loving species will vary. During this time, keep the tub in a temperature-controlled space between 65–75°F, out of direct sunlight, and don't remove the lid until colonization is complete.

You can do either. Building your own requires a clear ~64-quart plastic bin, a drill with 1-inch and 2-inch hole saw bits, self-adhesive filter patches, and a black contractor bag for lining. We recommend drilling six 2-inch holes around the perimeter and additional 1-inch holes just above the substrate level. Ready-made monotub kits are also available if you'd rather skip the DIY process.

Yes, substrate choice depends on the species you're growing. For manure-loving species (like Agaricus), a 50/50 blend of coco coir and composted horse manure works well, or you can use a pre-made option like Boomr Bag. For wood-loving species such as oyster mushrooms, chestnut, or nameko, you'll want hardwood-based substrate or wood chips instead.

All-in-one bags are generally the better starting point. They come pre-sterilized with everything you need except a spore or culture syringe, require no substrate mixing or sterilization equipment, and are compact enough to store discreetly. The tradeoff is a smaller yield and less flexibility, but for someone just getting started, the lower contamination risk and simpler process make them the more forgiving option.

It depends on your goals. A monotub costs roughly two to three times more than a single all-in-one bag, and that's before factoring in spawn and substrate. However, monotubs are reusable indefinitely and have a much larger fruiting surface area, potentially yielding tens of pounds per fruiting versus a few pounds from a single bag. For anyone looking to scale up or cultivate long-term, the monotub tends to be more cost-effective over time.

It comes down to matching a mushroom's fruiting temperature range to your regional climate pattern. Generally, species fall into three groups — cold (40–65°F), moderate (55–75°F), and warm (65–90°F), and four climate types: wet summer, wet winter, arid, and cold. For example, a gardener in a cold climate like Portland, ME would target cold and moderate species in April or September, while someone in a wet winter climate like Eugene, OR would aim for an October inoculation for those same groups.

Yes, microclimates can matter more than your broader regional climate. Shade, wind, slope, nearby water, and heat reflected off pavement or buildings can all make a specific spot meaningfully cooler, warmer, wetter, or drier than surrounding areas. Placing mushrooms under tall crops like tomatoes or kale, along drip irrigation lines, or beneath perennial shrubs can create the humidity and shade conditions mushrooms thrive in.

A few principles apply everywhere. Keep your substrate at "field capacity", moist like a wrung-out sponge. Protect mushrooms from temperatures above 90°F using shade and extra watering. Watch for storms and temperature swings, as these fluctuations often trigger fruiting. And don't plant Almond Agaricus until all frost risk has passed, as it may not survive harsh winter conditions.