Shrooms did wonders in my life. a veteran, was actually addicted to alcohol and cigarettes. I suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Got diagnosed with cptsd. Not until my wife recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 8 years totally clean. Never thought I would be saying this about mushrooms.
@gusna822663 күн бұрын
I love hearing great life changing stories like this. I want to become a mycologist because honestly mushrooms are the best form of medicine (most especially the psychedelic ones) There are so many people today used magic mushrooms to ween off of SSRI medication- its amazing! Years back i wrote an entire essay about psychedelics. they saved you from death buddy, lets be honest here.
@ErnestoHorner883 күн бұрын
Hey mates! Can you help with the source? I suffer severe anxiety, panic and depression and I usually take prescription medicine, but they don't always help. Where can I find those psilocybin mushrooms? I'm really interested in treating my mental health without Rxs. I live in Australia don't know much about these. I'm so glad they helped you. I can't wait to get them too. Really need a reliable source 🙏
@CathieGomez-mp8sk3 күн бұрын
YES sure of mycologist Pedroshrooms. Mushrooms literally got me off my feet and turned my whole life around. I am currently a housing manager for a recovery program. I wouldn't have been able to do that shit without psilocybin.
@canerbakar-jv2si3 күн бұрын
I'm so very happy for you mate, Psilocybin is absolutely amazing, the way it shows you things, the way it teaches you things. I can not believe our world and our people shows less interest about it's helpfulness to humanity. It's love. The mushrooms heals people by showing the truth, it would be so beneficial for so many people, especially politicians and the rich who have lost their way and every other persons out there.
@ale22-e1b2 күн бұрын
Where do I reach this dude? If possible can I find him on Google
@ellenlittle655110 ай бұрын
Thanks for warning against boiling the straw! I appreciate that you explain WHY you do everything, not just HOW to do it.
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching. I really enjoyed this project, especially given the savings to be enjoyed from growing your own like this.
@TheTubejunky9 ай бұрын
Try a pressure cooker as this will sterilize your substrate and kill everything. It can help reduce future contamination and grain to grain transfers.
@mozempire50967 ай бұрын
@@TheTubejunky If you watch the video, you will see that it very clearly advises AGAINST sterilizing the substrate, as that can actually encourage BAD mycelium to colonize the substrate. You WANT SOME life in the substrate. Just not enough to be dominant over the mushroom spawn.
@acatisfinetoo69217 ай бұрын
@@GrowVeg will any straw work? (oc after being boiled)
@fudgefudge89136 ай бұрын
@@TheTubejunky you are one of those people that read the synopses but say you read the book.
@dee22519 ай бұрын
Mushrooms are incredibly good for you, especially medicinal mushrooms varieties like Turkey tail, Lions mane, Reishi, shiitake, cordyceps, etc and if you put them in the sun they absorb Vit D, giving you extra Vit D in your diet. There was recently a discussion about them from a mushroom expert and Prof Tim Spector on the ZOE channel on KZbin. They’re amazing and you have now inspired me to try and grow them.
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
I'll keep an eye out for that discussion. I also take lion's mane for the brain! :-)
@carolburnett83728 ай бұрын
what about Bella mushrooms, l love that flavor......can they grow this same way???
@WhyAreYouAttingMeRightNow7 ай бұрын
Cordyceps grow on insects
@NoraNoita7 ай бұрын
the Vitamin D mushrooms you see in stores are hit with special lamps to get the Vitamin D into them.
@dee22517 ай бұрын
@@NoraNoita yes I had guessed that as we can also absorb Vit D from sunlamps providing they have the right kinds of UV and mushrooms aren’t going get that during the winter in Northern hemispheres, so putting them out in the sun to absorb Vit D from the sun isn’t an option during winter. Looks like getting sunlamps for growing our mushrooms then 😄
@jayefoster321210 ай бұрын
I like your style! You simplify it without all kinds of gadgets, and greenhouses and fans… Humidity monitors… The list goes on. You just cut to the chase and get it done. So I appreciate your video. I appreciate you. This is something I wanna teach my grandchildren how to do this? It’s a science project that they can eat so thank you.
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
So pleased you found the video useful. It's a great project for kids, so I'm sure your grandchildren will love doing this. :-)
@tmontero84929 ай бұрын
Ben! Thank you for breaking down the actual process of growing mushrooms into bite-sized pieces that are easy to digest. Other videos seem to offer too much science that is not required to grow mushrooms. At 69 years of age, starting a mushroom farm is not my life's goal. I always enjoy and appreciate your videos as they are easy for me to understand. Greetings from the San Francisco bay area!
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
So pleased this video was easy to digest. It's a really fun project - I do recommend trying it. :-)
@ken4819593 күн бұрын
Agreed. After all, mushrooms will grow on a cowpie in the field with no help at all. Of course, you don't want to eat TOO many of that variety at one sitting! 😵💫
@patriciakali876 ай бұрын
I love how you use both metric and imperial units and explain everything not just the how to, but the why do
@Aliestor9 ай бұрын
I think it is worth mentioning that it is no advised to take off the lid as much as he does in the videos. Oysters are generally resilient but there is always a risk of contamination. Also the tape should stay on the bucket until the mushroom starts pinning, the bucket acts as a hard tree trunk and the holes with tape acts as a weak point for the mushroom to 'fruit' The mycelium is strong enough to push the tape aside. It is also worth mentioning that the mycelium is actual 'plant' growing and that the mushrooms are the fruits of the mycelium. Spraying water directly onto the fruit is also not advised but getting the right balance between moisture and oxygen can be hard.
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
Great suggestions and advice, many thanks for sharing this. :-)
@MrsB197something7 ай бұрын
Maybe you should make videos as well
@lorraine41432 ай бұрын
well i cant see where he has gone wrong , the method that grow veg used is perfect as you can see the great results !
@coptotermes10 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video, interesting! Quick tip, for drilling large holes in plastic like these buckets try running the drill in reverse. You get a much neater round hole and the bit will not “grab” and make a mess.
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
Top tip - thanks so much. I'm pretty useless with power tools, so appreciate this comment! :-)
@tomeubank36259 ай бұрын
That might be true for twist and Forster bits; however, he was using a spade bit for the larger holes.
@evil179 ай бұрын
Probably a better solution if possible, is to use a conical drill or step drill for making nice neat holes in thinner materials like plastic & sheet metals, you can also give the hole a slight shamfer between the steps for a clean smooth finish without burring.
@ladybugsarah66718 ай бұрын
Would laundry baskets work?. I've seen them used before. And specifically how many more types of mushrooms may be grown this way???@@GrowVeg
@JonWolaver8 ай бұрын
good idea. i've had drill bits grabbing in plastic, never thought of reversing the drill bit. Wiz
@MD-wk3gj9 ай бұрын
I’ve never felt so confident that this is something I can grow. My overall gardening experience is filled with only tiny successes but I have a feeling I might see a big win with mushrooms. Thank you for showing so many of the stages to the process.
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
I hope you're inspired to try it - it's very satisfying. :-)
@punkrock6669 ай бұрын
You're a fungi! Sorry, I mean a fun guy! This is the first video of yours I watched and I loved it. Subscribed!
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
So pleased you watched the video and thanks for the sub. Welcome to the channel!
@donaldkatalenic83456 ай бұрын
Same here 😍
@lindsaymitchell11745 ай бұрын
Same here! I cannot wait to try this! I'm a little wary of doing it indoors in my home (hello, mold). Any tips?
@jasonburningham970611 ай бұрын
I like how he emphasizes cleanliness and sterilization but then uses his teeth to tear the surgical tape.
@francesbernard244511 ай бұрын
Me too. It isn't as if he was at the time trying to grow a sample in a Petri dish to see what kind of germ was already present to discern what kind of disease his mushrooms got.
@valerialagosterrizzano30211 ай бұрын
worked fine for him...
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Yes, I realise the error of my ways now. Scissors next time round!
@kikks46111 ай бұрын
@growveg Ok THIS is why I love your videos - sense of humor and humility. Truthfully not a apocalyptical-type error, though, right?
@kikks46111 ай бұрын
Ok THIS is why I love your videos - sense of humor and humility. Truthfully not a apocalyptical-type error, though, right? @@GrowVeg 🤯
@erinclarke27155 ай бұрын
Thanks for showing that you borrowed a tool!!! It’s is great to show that DIY is accessible even if you don’t own all the supplies because you can lean on your community for support
@kittenwithagun9 ай бұрын
I just did one of the mushroom grow kits and was thrilled watching them double in size each day! I’ve never been able to successfully grow anything before but now I want to try my hand at gardening.
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
That's really great to hear! You should definitely try growing more. :-)
@kenjiodatrotter9869 ай бұрын
I used to drill drainage holes in the bottom of the buckets too, but I don't anymore because I use wood pellets instead of straw, straw can get very wet and hence needs drainage, but this affects yields because you will have a bunch of mushrooms trying to form at the bottom of the bucket out of the drainage holes, this is not good because if the bucket is on a dirty surface (in the yard) then you can't really eat those ones, the benefit of wood pellets is that you can have precise control over the moisture content, so you don't need to worry about drainage with oyster mushrooms, 60% water and 40% wood pellet is optimal, so if you have 1 kg of wood pellets, then just add 1.5 L of boiling water and hydrate in a sanitized cooler to retain heat over 24hrs.
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
This is really useful information, thank you so much! :-)
@naturalchefshobhan66672 ай бұрын
When you say wood pellets, do you mean what people burn in a pellet burners? Or do you mean wood chips? Could you use wood chips??
@stevenmuti357015 күн бұрын
I can't speak for this guy but I know that when people forage mushrooms they want to find them growing on some kind of hardwood so I would think White oak is probably idealwhat I'm thinking is purchase some white oak wood chips or pellets like you would use for smoking meat, but instead use those in place of straw. The story I get from ChatGPT looking up the impact of growth media is that cardboard straw and some other materials may give you softer less flavorful mushrooms than you might get using hardwood.@@naturalchefshobhan6667
@kirstypollock681111 ай бұрын
Just a comment - I got an oyster mushroom kit last year and it specifically warned against growing it indoors in a room that is often occupied. Apparently they release a lot of spores and quite a few people develop an allergy. I grew mine in the boiler room, which has some windows.
@cuznclive223611 ай бұрын
Using a Martha tent works well to control spores; venting it outside is even better.
@MElaughs11 ай бұрын
Get them picked before they get too big. That way you harvest before they spore. Consider it like courgettes, sure you can have massive fruits but a better fruit if its picked sooner. There will be more flesh and less gills.
@tiger155411 ай бұрын
I grow my oyster mushrooms from spores/mycelium starting in my home with liquid culture then to grain jars. Last, I finally place them in the unoccupied outdoor garage to grow inside the buckets. My family and I do not have allergic symptoms even though but I guess everyone is different so maybe try to do an allergy test first. If you have allergies do not fear because there are also the more rare spore-less variety mushrooms which should never release spores. I was nervous myself about the danger at first but now I'm growing over 10 different mushroom strains from scratch as novice with no fancy equipment.
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Yes, I think the trick is to harvest them before they produce loads of spores, which can make quite a mess as well. I think at the very least, it may be worth avoiding them in the bedroom, which carbon dioxide levels can get quite high overnight, potentially slowing the mushrooms' growth.
@zialuna11 ай бұрын
Great video, I'm gonna try it!
@faithsrvtrip87689 ай бұрын
In the US make sure the straw you buy isn't sprayed with an herbicide! I grew potatoes in resin tubs and it went fabulous. Those tubs were $20 at Home Depot but using these smaller buckets would be even cheaper and not too heavy to move after watering.
@isabelladavis13639 күн бұрын
I was going to suggest the exact same thing about pure straw if you are able to find some and then be able to afford it! Thankfully the farmers are honest letting me know what they spray with..
@isabelladavis13639 күн бұрын
Looks quite doable and love shrooms! Thank you so much for sharing this informative video
@ken4819593 күн бұрын
That's why using a pet feed or bedding straw is a good idea. Thanks for the reminder.
@jeffengel260711 ай бұрын
With a little luck and a little looking, you may be able to find oyster mushrooms in a grocery or farmer's market to try out for your own use at home before committing to home cultivation. They're not perfectly interchangeable with the common white button mushrooms, although you would not go far wrong acting as if they are. Some ice cream tubs (in the U.S. market at least) are of similar volume and shape to the buckets used here, and so "free" with the purchase of the ice cream and a vigorous cleaning after. Oyster mushrooms do not keep all that well fresh, but you can dry them (and then optionally powder them) for much longer preservation. It can be handy when home cultivation provides them at a schedule that awkwardly suits your use of them.
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Really great advice here, thank you. :-)
@hfrench7899 ай бұрын
I was a mushroom hater because all I ever had was the white cap button muxhrooms and I could not stand them. Thank goodness a co worker got me to try oyster. Gosh how I love them! cooked in butter with a little bit of thyme. Like heaven!
@goldenroux612Ай бұрын
@jeffengel2607 if you dry them, reconstitute with white wine before sautéing them.
@Hathathorne9 ай бұрын
I got a automatic mister and 30 free buckets in an old tent I got from facebook marketplace for 30 bucks. I used dried grass clippings and mulched leaves instead of straw and it works fine, giving me 2-4 harvests each time. I pasteurize it in a steel trash can, I use the juice to water my garden, can't let all those nutrients go to waste. My neighbors started giving me their grass clippings and I've been just laying it out to dry, they don't use chemicals on their grass either.
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
Sounds like you've driven down the costs even more and have a great system there! :-)
@albinmiftari18329 ай бұрын
Do you make spore prints or do you just break it up like he did in the video?
@aaron-gz9 ай бұрын
Who is this Mister and how is he automatic 🤔
@purerachet77159 ай бұрын
@@aaron-gz 🤣
@violettracey8 ай бұрын
Awesome!
@joshmayich795911 ай бұрын
Just a random post. Really love your page. Im a father of three kids and as it turns out a hazelnut and hops farmer. Theres always so much to learn. Youve helped our home garden take on a whole new life and really really appreciate the time effort and attention to detail that you have. Thanks so much and cant wait to keep watching! cheers mate! 👏👏🍻🍻
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Oh wow - what kind words! That's really lovely to hear. You must be a great dad getting your home garden in shape - I'm sure the kids must love to get involved with that. Thanks for watching. Cheers mate back at yer! :-)
@Ghada-xb7dk4 ай бұрын
I saw your channel 4 months ago and because I would like to write to you .Your method and explanation are beautiful and smooth. I followed the same method as you and it worked for me. My family and I are now enjoying the mushroom soup that I grew in your way. I sincerely thank you. I am grateful to you 😍😍
@GrowVeg4 ай бұрын
I am so delighted to hear this has worked so well for you. Fantastic! :-)
@Ghada-xb7dk3 ай бұрын
@@GrowVeg thank you 💖
@Ghada-xb7dk3 ай бұрын
@Myco_blacky 💖
@Veritasket10 ай бұрын
I was absolutely captivated by this video and I am so happy it showed up on my feed! I absolutely love mushrooms on my plate and while I'm used to foraging them in my home country, that's not commonly practiced where I'm at now. I never considered growing them instead, this looks super fun and doable! Thank you, fellow 'shroom enthusiast! :)
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
It's great fun to grow them this way - definitely give it a try! :-)
@mikaeelmalik172410 ай бұрын
That water ypu poured off of the straw is a great liquid fertilizer for the garden
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
What a great idea, thanks. :-)
@PandoraChaser29 ай бұрын
Water from grain spawn soaking/cooking, is also an excellent agar medium for subsequent liquid cultures or cloning generations.
@violettracey8 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@sachabkitty5 ай бұрын
For mushroom recipes, I recommend boiling them until the water fully evaporates! I watched a youtube video where the cook tested the best way to cook mushrooms and found how they kept their flavor this way and are REALLY delicious. Any mushrooms. I tested it and is the way I cook all mushrooms now. Just put them in a pan, fill with water until they are covered, and let it boil until all of the water evaporates. Trust me, it is great!
@GrowVeg5 ай бұрын
I'll have to give it a try!
@sachabkitty5 ай бұрын
@@GrowVeg I did it with portobello mushrooms, shimeji, and also funghi secchi, the funghi secchi I added afterwards to a stroganoff recipe and it was amazing! All the flavor was kept in!
@ng314710 ай бұрын
Thank you for being an awesome person who’s making wholesome, helpful content!
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
And thank you for watching. :-)
@michaelsabados382910 ай бұрын
‘Back To The Roots’ mushroom kits started by them going to coffee shops & getting free coffee grounds to use as substrate - instead of straw. They mixed it with sawdust, pasteurized it & drained the liquid to keep it moist. They made a lot of money doing this!
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
Smart move!
@user-uj9cy2wj1j10 ай бұрын
They did that for you?
@PandoraChaser29 ай бұрын
Alex Jong and Adam Sayner ("GRO CYCLE" yt channel) were probably the first commercial UK Mushroom growers and are experts in their field. They have helped many people become Urban Commercial Shroom and Microgreen farmers. Spent Brewers Grain is another potentially cheap substrate, which like coffee grounds is a waste product which needs to be rapidly inoculated but is pre-sterile/pasteurised from the brewing process. If you have local brewers, microbreweries, it would make an excellent grain spawn and mycoremediation of such perhaps freely given waste.
@SirDydimus869 ай бұрын
@@PandoraChaser2this is awesome! Now if companies in the States would take that stance...
@PandoraChaser29 ай бұрын
@@SirDydimus86 To be honest I think I actually found the idea on a USA mushroom websites lists of potential substrates/grain spawns and substrate disposal ideas. Similar to microgreens the waste post shroom grows, then too needs a purpose, but yes brewers spent grain is excellent grain spawn potentially free.
@lilybruggeman579611 ай бұрын
Hello and another great video :) I have been trying to grow oyster mushrooms in my veranda for years. The gray and blue grow in the winter months and the yellow and red in the summer months. That way I always have fresh ones. I also spray them with moisture in the morning and evening. I do use column bags, so I can see when the mycellium is almost gone and then make a new bag, but this can take more than a year. I can recommend everyone to try this, especially considering the price if you want to buy them fresh...
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Great to be enjoying them all year with both types. You're a mushroom pro! :-)
@priscillabeacham109011 ай бұрын
Curious is the ripping tape with mouth possibly contaminating it? I guess I’m just wondering how carefully I need to be I’m anxious about it I suppose. Excited to try this although worried about in fl with all the other things that may grow. Thanks for the video
@thecunningkrugereffect11 ай бұрын
I've grown several mushroom kits and never sterilized anything. May have not been as successful as it could've been, but there weren't any issues.
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
The teeth-ripped edge would, in theory, be beyond the edge of the hole being covered. I don't think it would up the risk appreciably, but, good point, better to use scissors!
@jessewright329610 ай бұрын
That tape can be torn off of the spool by hand.
@teardrop72010 ай бұрын
Please do a playlist on growing different types of mushrooms!
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
Need to produce some more videos on mushrooms first. In the meantime, check out our other mushroom guide: kzbin.info/www/bejne/bpLSppyeir-Cq9ksi=tAcl8xzdhUc7Tez3
@BillyBaruch9 ай бұрын
This is so cool!! Thank you for making this video. I'm not sure what led it to be in my feed, but I am glad. You've got me convinced to try my hand at mushrooms. I am a 60yo widowed grandpa. I cook a lot, but I have not gardened much at all in my life. Thanks for the inspiration. I can't wait to get my things together and see how it turns out!
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
I'm so pleased you're inspired to give this a go. It means a lot to make videos that affect change like this. Happy growing! :-)
@joemccall899111 ай бұрын
We took the dive into mycology this year and have blue oysters growing in a monotub as I write this. When I home brew I know if I start with a strong yeast and billions of cells they will out-compete the bad bugs but mushrooms are an entirely new world. Understandably, there's such a focus on sanitation (like homebrewing) that I think some of us forget these grow naturally in "dirty" forests. Have you had any wild spores take up residence or other growing issues with these buckets? I know when I first started I was extra cautious to avoid things like cobweb fungus (which apparently is rare) but am learning to just be judicious with cleaning and enjoy the harvests. Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Never had any problems. The pasteurisation is just a precaution - to up the chances of a 'clean' growth. Probably not always necessary, but reduces the risk of weed fungi and gives peace of mind I guess.
@antuloiotile934410 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this video. It's the first one i've watched that teaches how to continue to use the old straw to begin a new bucket so you do not need to buy micelium each time. That's exactly what i was looking for. I'll try this, tysm
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
Great stuff! My old straw-inoculated bucket looks like it's just about to start fruiting. :-)
@maggietaylor97134 ай бұрын
Your video is inspiring. I've been a gardener for nearly 50 years and celebrate when I see mycelium growing in the soil because I know that I'm in for a mystery treat.... But I never thought about growing fungi in buckets in the house. Winter project for sure. Many thanks.
@rmharding52638 ай бұрын
I'm 2 years into gardening, this will be my next project for sure. Thank you. I didn't know about automatic misters, you glossed over that. I will be hunting one of those down for my indoor collection of plants. 😅 Thank you.
@KnopyGames10 ай бұрын
loving the video and the emphasis on keeping everything clean only to see the tape being ripped with the mouth by habbit at 7:20. Gave me a chuckle. Awesome !
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
Clean scissors next time!
@MrAlexshellard9 ай бұрын
Cleans everything meticulously. bites tape into peace's... keep the videos up, il be starting mine in the next few days so I really appreciate it.
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
Great to hear you'll be starting yours - hope they grow well. :-)
@glitchymoss10 ай бұрын
this is the first video I've seen of this channel, and the enthusiasm is infectious! I've been trying to find things I can grow in my apartment, mushrooms might be the way to go ^-^
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
So pleased you've discovered the channel - welcome!
@CM-sy3to9 ай бұрын
Herbs, a single tomato and pepper plant for the balcony. A rack of microgreens for salad and sandwiches can look like decor in dining or livingroom. Grow a jar of sprouts on your kitchen counter, some kombucha or other fermented drink.
@Sartorri46669 ай бұрын
You have to be very sterile and present.
@nodoboho6 ай бұрын
@@CM-sy3to This is almost exactly what I've been planning! I've got some grocery-store "regrow" experiments (scallions, garlic, 2 ft tall cherry tomato plant) and some strawberry starts going in window box planters on the ledge in my bedroom (can't do it in the living room--that's the cat's sunbathing spot). I've got other experiments going with a grow bag (baby red and purple potatoes) and a set of three felt cubes (I tossed some sprouting onions in one) out on the balcony. I've got some trays I'm going to try using for microgreens &/or sprouts and just got the seeds. I may set them up on top of the video cabinet cum pantry, under the always-on ceiling light. I hadn't thought about kombucha...maybe something else fermented. Thanks for the reminder of "microgreens for salad and sandwiches". I salvaged a 36"W x 13"D wire rack I'm going to set up as a living/dining area divider/storage. It was a tall unit, but I'm going to set it up as two half-height units back-to-back (36"W x 26"D) so it doesn't block the view from the dining area to the living room/balcony window and sun. Favorite/mini-appliances on the middle shelves; small items on top, with a row of narrow window box planters with herbs down the middle as "green decor" (they'll get light there and be easy to "cut and come again"). Maybe I can tuck a mushroom bucket on the floor, under the middle shelf, with indirect light, instead of the milk crate I was going to keep (grocery-bought) apples or root veg in. (I once put a bag containing a block of mushroom starter I bought at a farmers market out on the balcony and forgot about it--the mushrooms broke through the bag and I got a harvest despite my complete neglect! Next time it might be better to have it where I won't forget it.) I have plans for restarting a tomato plant in a festive bright green litter bucket in one back corner of the balcony and a red pepper or mini-cucumber plant in a matching bucket in the other back corner. I figure I can put a trellis or cage against the wall in those corners if/when needed. Eventually, the felt cubes in the front corners and along the rail should have some greens, I think, or things that need the 12" depth of the cubes--beets perhaps (I love beet greens), maybe my potted rosemary when it needs re-potting (with some edible flowers around it or ?). I haven't decided what to try in the 10" x 15" x 7" D beverage crates (salvaged) that fit nicely on the iron baker's rack (also salvaged). The rack squeezes in along the side rail, between the felt cube in the front corner and the green bucket in the back corner. It's got four shelves...I should be able to grow some short lettuces and greens, maybe strawberries, radishes...whatever can grow in shallow containers.
@EM-yp1cf7 күн бұрын
Make sure the spores don’t spread into your living area. There’s something called spore lung (?) from breathing in spores continually.
@aukkranАй бұрын
Thank you for mentioning how to continue to reproduce the mycelium! You are the first tutorial that doesn't either completely skip that or tells me to continue to buy starter until I die. Appreciate it! We will try this this weekend.
@teddy214 күн бұрын
A small tip. Keep all the buckets stacked when drilling. They all get drilled at once this way instead of doing them individually.
@GrowVegКүн бұрын
Smart move! :-)
@OHOBGA11 ай бұрын
If you want to clean up the holes in your bucket and make them look rounder and get rid of the rough bits, roll up a piece of sandpaper into a tube. Put it in the hole and rub it in and out a few times. It expands into the hole, and if you twist as you go in and out, you get a nice round hole. Works on thin wood sheet as well.
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Great advice - thanks so much!
@renamarsland964211 ай бұрын
I didn’t realize how easy it is to grow mushrooms!!! I will definitely need to find a source (in CDA preferably) for the new year! Thank you for your video & information! LOVE your channel!
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Hope you manage to find some and grow them. A fantastic project for the new year.
@mariondunn658010 ай бұрын
Many thanks. I ordered the spawn and started in a large brew size tub today. It was really easy following your process. Looking forward to checking in a couple of weeks. For now it is inside in a room with a stable temp and aim to harvest before they spore. Great to have something to grow at this time of year.
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
That's really super to hear! I hope it grows well for you. :-)
@mihi-j9r3 ай бұрын
how did it go?
@mariondunn65803 ай бұрын
@@mihi-j9r Hi, it worked really well. I don't have much time so haven't reused/renewed the spawn. I'm intending to do again when time isn't so limited. I would try another variety though, I did oyster mushrooms and didn't find them very tasty.
@oldmilkmaid19558 ай бұрын
Thanks for making this great video - I've been wanting to try my hand at growing shrooms, but have a few too many irons in the fire most of the time. I have food-grade 5-gallon buckets and lids, don't have any straw, but do have a quantity of clean, rather fine sawdust. Since I'm finding lots of mycelium in my "wild" wood-chip piles, I know various shrooms will grow in them, and in sawdust. I saved a few "baby bella" mushrooms from the grocery store, aging them in the fridge so their spores will develop, and intend to break them up into a bucket of pasteurized sawdust - now that you've inspired me! I wish I'd seen your video LAST night - it rained all of today and kept me indoors - I could've been prepping a shroom-bucket instead of what I DID do! Oh well - it's supposed to rain and/or snow this weekend, too, so that'll be my project for those days I can't work outside. Thanks again!
@GrowVeg8 ай бұрын
So pleased you enjoyed the video. Very best of luck with your shrooms! :-)
@ianglass50788 ай бұрын
I grew oyster mushrooms in 5 gallon buckets a few years ago in a similar way, but i didn't have a drill so i stabbed each bucket with a screwdriver and i made Way more holes. Definitely recommend following his process...
@morefiction32649 ай бұрын
Ice cream can come in 1 gallon containers at US grocery stores. Handy sized buckets to have around the house.
@antoniawildmedia11 ай бұрын
The world is your oyster! Love it Ben! Such a great idea. I’m definitely going to try this! 😊
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Definitely do - very satisfying and no end of amazing puns! ;-)
@afloragrove9 ай бұрын
Followed your video and now have five buckets full of pink oyster mushrooms! Thank you so much!
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
That's really fabulous to read - well done! :)
@afloragrove4 ай бұрын
I’m on my fourth harvest from each bucket! I just added new straw on top of the buckets once they sunk in, added back some tape to the holes and extra luke warm water and boom! I grow mine in a glass kitchen cabinet and it grows great!
@zoelawrence5689 ай бұрын
So I've not done it myself yet, but I've researched this before, and I believe the following to be true: 1) if you want to skip the pasturisation step, I believe you can use compressed straw pellets, which are sort of pasturised by the compression process. A bit more uniform which might help with handleability as well 2) propogating from spent straw totally works, but the longer you do it the more the risk of pests goes up. More of a problem for commercial growers, but something to keep an eye out for. Mites seem to be the thing. If they show up you just need to isolate and start your next batch from grain spawn again, so contamination aside youve lost nothing. Questions and compliments! 1) the sterlising powder, what is it? Is it the same stuff brewers use? 2) Ive grown kits and ive done deep dives on all the ins and outs of commercial growing. But this video was pitched at just the right level of practical to cut through the useful but cluttered cloud of possibilities logged in my head. Buckets over bags may be a real gotcha for getting me moving - the bags arent exactly expensive but its another thing to track and buy, and feel bad about because of the disposability. Somehow buckets feel more doable and sturdy and sustainable. Take up less brain space
@SirDydimus869 ай бұрын
The sterilization powder is likely made of lime.
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
Thanks for your helpful comment Zoe - so pleased you found the video useful. Yes indeed, the sterilising powder is the same stuff brewers use. Quite cheap to buy and it goes a long way.
@teejay562711 ай бұрын
I do love a mushroom. This one is on my growing list of 2024. Thank you for being one of my favourite channels on YT. Wishing you and your family a Merry Christmas and Great New Year 🖖
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for your kind words. Here's to a very productive 2024! :-)
@JoeBanjo8811 ай бұрын
Great stuff! Cheers Ben. Mushroom stroganoff! Right into a pot with butter onions and lots of garlic, chicken stock, herbs, Bronners bullion, cook then thicken with a bit of arrowroot starch…YUM.
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Yes - that does sound maximum-volume yum!
@SuneKelly11 ай бұрын
Good morning from South Africa. We just want to wish you and your family a lovely Christmas and an exciting new year. Love from the Kelly family.
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Thank you so much - that's incredibly kind of you. A very merry Christmas to your family also. :-)
@songulmcphee26698 ай бұрын
Highly enjoyed your video,my son is nearly 10 and he has been nagging me to grow mushrooms and l didn’t want go buy a kit.l now know how to do it and we ll do it with my son for sure.Thank you very much.🤙
@GrowVeg8 ай бұрын
Great stuff - you'll really enjoy the process of growing them this way. I'm sure your son will be hooked on growing! :-)
@indomitusx76537 ай бұрын
Ok, this video quality is wildly good! The framing of your shots and the panning and transitions are amazing! You are also a really good teacher. You steps are clear and explained and wow I’m just super impressed… and looking for buckets now
@GrowVeg7 ай бұрын
Thanks so much! :-)
@masta18210 ай бұрын
Props for going through the trouble of digging out that cape and hat just for the joke. I don't know when you last picked up a playstation controller but I can assure you that it does hold up to watching mushrooms grow. Not to say that watching mushrooms grow isn't fun.
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
This comment made me smile. Thanks so much! :-)
@PleasantPrickles11 ай бұрын
That harvest looks like a valuable heap of delicious mushrooms. Enjoy! 🍄
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
It was a total heap of deliciousness. Very much enjoyed, thank you!
@tecmow439910 ай бұрын
This looks like so much fun. I’ve had it as a vague thought for a while but this has helped crystallize it. Thank you 😊
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
Definitely give it a go! :-)
@FUMIYOtruehealing8 ай бұрын
Super Yummy Oyster mushroom pasta recipe from my home (Japan) that I’ve enjoyed for decades is so simple 😊 1. Separate oyster mushrooms into small pieces. 2. Prep pasta (I like linguine) by boiling with some salt in water -> al dente 💕 3. While pasta is prepping, Sauté the mushrooms with olive oil in a skillet until soft. 4. Put equal amount of Soy sauce and Japanese Sake, and finish sautéing. 5. Put al dente pasta into the skillet and mix with the mushroom sauce. 6. Put on a plate and top with chopped green onions and some cayenne pepper powder. Enjoy 😘
@berenicehickey97559 ай бұрын
Will try this here in Singapore..we get massive fungi growing happily in our very high humid environment!
@brianharris15739 ай бұрын
Mix together 10 cups of hardwood smoking pellets, any variety or blend of hardwood works. ($9 for 30 lbs) and 3 quarts of water (2.8 liters). The pellets are sterilized during the pelletizing process. This is one common substrate for shiitake, lions mane and oysters. It fluffs right up, colonizes well and no sterilization needed. Just mix and add the spawn. I use hydrogen peroxide instead of water and the mushrooms love it since it turns into pure water and oxygen while keeping things sterile. I use peroxids with all of my shrooms and spray the cultures down with it using a sprayer on the peroxide bottle. Every spray bottle I've seen the nozzle fits a peroxide and rubbing alcohol bottle. Temu has the best price for them. Activated charcoal powder mixed in the substrate is my latest experiment and some types really go crazy on it in the petri dish stage. Masters mix makes bigger crops and shrooms but needs sterilization and adds soybean hulls and wheat bran to the smoking pellets. I can't find straw at a reasonable price so smoking pellets really saves me. I'm too used to seeing your comment has been rejected at this point. It's human milk and chest feeding now! Yahoo won't even let me use chicken breasts in comments and furniture polish without polish capitalized and not get rejected. Furniture polish, Polish sausage. Hickory dickory rejected. I really need to get to bed!
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing this method - it's really great to hear alternatives to straw and I may have to try this way next time. :-)
@esaedromicroflora124710 ай бұрын
you explained very well the idea that making an organic material sterile is easy (boiling water) but the problem is keeping that thing sterile, while leaving thermophile flora is usually a good idea (like in most cheeses) to avoid contamination by bad guys
@jasonhughes72611 ай бұрын
Great Video , How much did it cost for all the Starter kit please ? or how much cost for each bucket ? As Tesco and other big super markets charge a lot for mushroom.
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
So it's definitely cheaper than buying them in the supermarket, especially when you consider that you can use older straw to re-start a new bucket. Costs were roughly as follows: Buckets: 5 buckets cost £7.83 (Amazon) Pet straw: £5.99 (though I'm sure I found it cheaper when I bought it - around £3.99) Microprous tape: £4 (Boots. Lasts ages!) Sanitising stuff: £2.39 (Lasts ages!) Mushroom spawn: Varies. I bought an enormous bag for £29.99, but can buy smaller bags from £8.75. Sourced from here: urban-farm-it.com/products/blue-grey-oyster-mushroom-grain-spawn?variant=45076413710616 The buckets are, of course, reusable, and the other costs are minimal, bar the spawn. But given the yield, still cheaper than buying in the supermarket.
@johannes_28610 ай бұрын
You would be such a good teacher.
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
Thank you. :-)
@terricarrozza319811 ай бұрын
Have you tried growing Shiitaki or Chestnut Mushrooms? If so, I'd be interested in learning about that, I like mushrooms but I don't want to spend loads of money on kits and you show ways to do things much more on the cheap! Thanks Ben for all of your helpful advice and have a Merry Christmas!
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching. I've not tried growing chestnut or shiitaki mushrooms yet - but hope to do so soon. Oysters are just very easy, but I suspect chestnut mushrooms would be too.
@saschanydegger657710 ай бұрын
Where did you buy all the required equipment and "ingredients"? Especially the spores?
@masta18210 ай бұрын
shiitake are not as easy to homegrow. but they are best dried anyway
@sheilasydneynotyerbizniz29339 ай бұрын
Shi takes grow on oak wood
@DavidWaspe7 ай бұрын
It's always intriguing to see our gardener's, I've embedded my strawberries in a permanent bed and I'm looking forward to planting out, I'm propagating on the space I have available, I'm seeing my peas pop up, so I'm excited, it's a work in progress, but it's always rewarding 👍
@giladrechnitzer4857 сағат бұрын
thank you! great video and explained well. do you spray regular water or distilled water outside of the box?
@CassiWooWoo11 ай бұрын
Merry Christmas Ben. Thank you so much for all the amazing advice you kindly share with us all ☃️🎄Wishing you continued success in the New Year 🥳
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for watching. And a very merry Christmas and joyous start to the year to you and your family too. :-)
@joslac501811 ай бұрын
Great video! You've sparked my interest in growing mushrooms!🍄
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
So pleased! Definitely worth giving a grow.
@Aa-np8np4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the great contents! And to all the viewers who saw the comments about “psychedelics saved my life” or “my ADHD was cured by mushroom” or whatever, please don’t consider getting them delivered. I see these comments everywhere on mushroom growing channels, it’s clearly all automated bots repeating the same sentences. Please report them as spam if you find them.
@GrowVeg4 ай бұрын
Thanks - and yes, they're definitely bots/spam. I try to delete them as they come up here too. :-)
@zanpouchkine6 ай бұрын
I was told by a lab technician that a couple of burning candles on the table would help sterilize the environment. Great video!!!
@FelixWatts8 ай бұрын
So, did it work the second time, using the straw as spawn? One tip: use spent coffee grounds instead of straw, they are usually available for free from coffee shops and come pre-sterilised.
@GrowVeg8 ай бұрын
They did produce mushrooms the second time round, yes. I was very pleased with the result. :-)
@thomassby713910 ай бұрын
What an absolutely pleasant man you are and an enjoyable presentation you did there. Thank you so much for this. Cheers.
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
You are most welcome, and thank you for your kind words. :-)
@janicealderson432911 ай бұрын
Love this Ben - it's always mushrooms with me and I haven't tried them yet so expensive in the shops. More complicated with Shitake though! I thank that's an outside job.
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
This is a genuinely easy way to grow them and, I reckon, the most cost effective. Give it a go!
@laiajune66929 ай бұрын
Psychedelics saved me from years of uncontrollable depression, anxiety and illicit pill addiction. Imagine carrying heavy chains for over a decade and then all of a sudden that burden is gone. Believe it or not in a couple years they'll be all over for treatment of mental health related issues.
@polinaalissa3679 ай бұрын
Please does anyone know where I can get them? I put so much on my plate and it really affects my stress and anxiety levels, I would love to try shrooms
@SergeantRodriguez-lm4hl9 ай бұрын
My friend told me about how psilocybin shrooms helped him deal with trauma, anxiety and depression. I would love to try them though I haven't found any legit grower to get it.
@mariaclara44809 ай бұрын
I was having this unbearable anxiety and depression because of mental stress from school, work and life generally. Then I came across a mycologist dr.joeshroom He saved my life honestly.
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing this experience. I've read a lot around psilocybin and it's potential benefits for treating depression.
@brendanfisher96869 ай бұрын
Since I started micro dosing mushrooms, I have noticed a few thing for sure, better mental and physical awareness. My positivity and will power has rocketed as well. It's been really good.
@Kalrak5 ай бұрын
I don't want to be rude ... you have a witch outfit but you don't have a drill love you're videos just stared watching a couple of days ago. And let me tell you I appreciate you gardening youtubers for going out you're way and mention Celsius and Fahrenheit centimeters and inches ... makes life so much easy, and not have to stop the video any time something is mentioned and i have to look it up.
@GrowVeg5 ай бұрын
Haha, yes, the witches outfit is rather niche!
@thorasmund8 ай бұрын
The best video I have seen so far for mushroom growing for beginners. Thanks so much for getting me started!
@myboysd57728 ай бұрын
@TrumpJonas-oz1xr This TrumpJonas person is an obvious scammer
@zos17128 ай бұрын
I followed your instructions to the letter (or almost...) and it turned out great! Here are my modifications: 1. I bought oat straw at a pet shop. I didn't know they have straw flavors for rabbit bedding, lol. A quick Google search told me that oats are a good base for mushroom growing. Does it matter? Anyway, I learned that straw is surprisingly costly. 2. I couldn't find any grain spawn quickly. It seems like most places make very large quantities on demand only. I was looking at weeks of delay. Instead, I used a blue oyster growing kit. It cost about $20 (CAD) for 1kg of mycelium fully colonized in sawdust. There was no issue combining the sawdust base with straw. Let me know if it's an absolute no-go. I crumbled it with a 10% mycelium to straw ratio and let it sit for 2 weeks. Next time I will do at least 3 weeks. 3. I made 1-inch holes, but 1/2 inch would have been better. The bucket had a hard time retaining moisture, small oyster buttons started growing from every hole but did not fully develop - even from the holes covered in surgical tape. My question is, does this method work with lion's mane? If so, any recommendations regarding the specifics of growing lion's mane? Thanks a lot!
@GrowVeg8 ай бұрын
Great tweaks there, thanks for sharing this. Unfortunately this method wouldn't work with lion's mane, which I believe need hardwood to grow on.
@stewartmoore11 ай бұрын
Did you give Trevor some mushrooms since he did lend you the drill and bit ?
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Haha - Trevor is my long-suffering neighbour. And yes, he's definitely getting the next batch of shrooms! (Probably should have got the first to be fair!).
@SWA-Projects10 ай бұрын
That’s genius, I’ll definitely give this a try.. thanks for sharing this👍
@Miss_DaBLE-Oh-77 ай бұрын
I've been growing from kits but ready to try my own. Recipe alert: Blue Oyster- fried dish Pink oyster- carnitas Chestnut -shrimp or seafood dishes
@GrowVeg7 ай бұрын
Lovely ideas, thank you! :-)
@jillmetcalf11 ай бұрын
I've been thinking about growing mushrooms for a while I think I might give it a go thanks Ben 👍
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Please do - it's so much fun!
@frankgessner676610 ай бұрын
I put my bucket with holes in a bucket without holes, when waiting for the mushrooms to come out. It saves a lot of money on tape and time.
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
What a really fab idea - I'd never think to do that. Brilliant!
@partysqu1d10 ай бұрын
The perfect mix of super informative, and playfully goofy. Amazing content!
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
Thanks so much! :-)
@privateeye24909 ай бұрын
You'd have to keep the water at a consistent temp for a set time to pasteurize... doubt youre doing much after the first few minutes as the temp drops rapidly in that bucket.
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
I left it all in there for around 20 minutes. I reckon more of the bacteria will have been killed off as it was very hot.
@gado199020078 ай бұрын
Loving your content! Thanks for sharing mate. I was wondering if the bucket you inoculated with the straw with mycelium ended up giving good results. I'm talking about the one you made at the end of the video. I'm wondering if a continuous cycle can be actually implemented or if eventually a new spawn will be needed.
@GrowVeg8 ай бұрын
The second bucket gave a really good harvest. However, towards the end I did notice a few fruit flies, which may be a good reason to start again when it comes to the third time round, using fresh grain spawn.
@Williamgregory-zb6et6 ай бұрын
The use of magic mushrooms completely helps one get over depression and makes you feel like yourself.
@PaulRoberts3205 ай бұрын
I got mine from doc.coby
@WalterMaguire10 ай бұрын
My favorite part is when he rips the tape with his teeth while he's talking about cleanliness. It's a 10. I have been enjoying the video though
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
Will definitely be using clean scissors next time! :-)
@robmclaughlin42011 ай бұрын
the caldron thing was great
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Thanks! :-)
@panchoworld24576 ай бұрын
Really loved your video, you really kept the things simple to understand. Could you give a little update on the new buckets? Did the mycelium grow again after this time?
@GrowVeg6 ай бұрын
I got a really great second crop then one of them got some flies, so I aborted them after a second round of buckets. But they did super-well, so may have gone on a few more times if the flies hadn't got in there!
@panchoworld2457Ай бұрын
@GrowVeg hi! Today I'm harvesting my first flush after transferring the mycelium to a new bucket with more straw. Really thanks to your video I've been having a lot of fun this couple of months growing mushrooms:)
@dylandesmond8 ай бұрын
Mushrooms increase co2 in the garden for low plants like lettuce cabbage, spinach kale etc etc that are close to the ground... Increases growth and allows hotter temperatures
@JackDespero10 ай бұрын
The irony of boiling the straw and sterilzing the buckets and the surface to grow mushrooms!
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
I know - I regret doing that. I'll use scissors (clean ones!) next time around!
@janohdegroot98911 ай бұрын
Interresting, you sterilize everything and then you bite of the tape 😂.. But.. great idea! Very helpful..!!
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Thanks, glad you found it useful. Lots of comments on me biting the tape. Scissors next time!
@MrsB197something7 ай бұрын
@@GrowVegI found it refreshing @GrowVeg after all sometimes you've just got to be Human❤
@janw4918 ай бұрын
**DO NOT drill the holes into the bucket before you pasteurize your straw in said bucket!
@meisievannancy3 ай бұрын
They are supposedly reusable.
@eileenreynolds5511 ай бұрын
My daughter says she has bought me a mushroom growing kit for Christmas, which I’m excited about. Once the kit has finished producing mushrooms, will I be able to use the spent straw to inoculate a new batch of straw, in the same way you have done in the video with 3 buckets?
@GrowVeg11 ай бұрын
Yes, in theory that should work. My re-inoculated bucket (using old straw) is coming along nicely, so should produce mushrooms soon I reckon. So hopefully you'll be able to use your kit in the same way. Merry Christmas!
@veganbutcherhackepeter8 ай бұрын
I have cultivated all kinds of mushrooms and anally following sterile procedure and pasturizing the substrate is absolutely key if you don't want to end up with a total disaster of a moldfest or bacterial contamination. I actually always worked in a self-built clean room in full hospital gear.
@GrowVeg8 ай бұрын
Good to know all the effort of keeping things clean is definitely worth it. :-)
@SketchybrainD8 ай бұрын
I get excited seeing mushrooms do their thing. Seeing pins pop up gives me a joy I can’t explain. Just makes me happy
@whatthefunction914010 ай бұрын
England. Where there is one power tool for every 1000 citizens
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
Haha - yes indeed! :-)
@reuse_or_die10 ай бұрын
Plastic and food should not be combined. PFAS chemicals leak out of plastic surfaces into food and water We should be looking at substances that are NOT PLASTIC, for food production and delivery
@kadmow10 ай бұрын
- getting bale straw and throwing it through a garden shredder can work... (you may have a friend who has one to borrow) Growing the mushrooms in an outdoor woodshed or similar seems a great idea.
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
Yes, that would be a fab idea. :-)
@dpwright3210 ай бұрын
I was hoping you would elaborate on how you then sustain your harvesting indefinitely. You showed that you could reuse the post harvest straw for another batch, but said it takes longer to produce. Do you ever repurchase the starter mushroom stuff? In other words, can you describe what you now do week by week, etc, including purchasing new stuff? Obviously new straw, tape, etc, mostly wanting to hear about the stater mushroom stuff…. Thanks! Great video.
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
The bucket I started off with the old straw is now cropping nicely, so it does take a bit longer but is successful. In theory you just need more straw to keep things going, using it led straw - which will have lots of mycelium - to inoculate the next.
@davewright183210 ай бұрын
I'm sorry to add a critical point to your otherwise helpful video but being an ex nurse I would have preferred you not to have bitten the tape to cover the holes in the bucket. I always taught the student nurses to cut the tape with clean scissors. A small point I know but considering the steps you took be as clean as possible I felt that it was one worth making.
@GrowVeg10 ай бұрын
Lots of people have mentioned this, and I will definitely be using clean scissors in future. :-)
@michaeljordan2157 ай бұрын
Oh please. You probably eat processed food anyway because it is sanitized.
@WeAreRobotsUK7 ай бұрын
What a weird comment 😂😂
@ahmadm37407 ай бұрын
Good note nurse. Thank you for your service
@thanhnam9557 ай бұрын
The mushroom smelled like his unbrushed saliva 😂
@cattigereyes15 ай бұрын
Plastic buckets or microplastics right into your food! Healthy!!
@GrowVeg5 ай бұрын
Of course I'd suggest using food-grade plastics. And as these buckets are kept inside they shouldn't disintegrate like they might outside, in the sunshine.
@dushyantham22544 ай бұрын
Yup, like you make sure all the other food you eat doesn't touch plastic things like crates and pipes and bags
@billhutchinson63182 ай бұрын
Or the water that falls as rain, or the air we breathe...
@n7862Ай бұрын
Every heard of food grade plastic ?
@jukkauh9 ай бұрын
99.9% isopropyl alcohol is a poor choice. It evaporates too quickly to sterlize a surface. It's good for cleaning electronic circuits, not for sanitation. Ironically what you want is 70%, which has enough water to prevent the alcohol from evaporating before it's done its job.
@GrowVeg9 ай бұрын
That's a really helpful tip, thanks for sharing this. :-)