It's partially normal for grow bags to apparently get more moist, because water can evaporate from the substrate and condense back again on the bag. On the other hand, like I said wet spots are a name for bacterial infection and it can be a little tricky to discriminate between the two situations with little experience. One thing though is that if your substrate is overrun with bacteria you simply will not see any good colonization in those places, it's a bad sign to see good colonization stop where it meets a wet-looking portion. That is, if you have any real colonization at all. Wait longer.
You bought a growing kit? You mean in the past, and did you have any result?
"Find" slow or fast colonizing jars? I think Qnick meant relatively slow or fast for one species, I have already mentioned fast colonizing substrains mostly Cubensis from South-American origin. There is no trick to find quick or slow jars, it is very simple: fast colonized jars are completely white (a fluffy cottonball sort of fuzzy aka "rhizomorphic") soon, sooner than other jars.
Quite frankly I would be amazed if you would pull off a Tampanensis fruiting grow with poor methods. Not to rain on your parade but the strain is said to be a little hard to cultivate also 'somewhat hard to get to fruit', typically not a good sign for unexperienced growers who do not follow procedure. For it to work you do not only have to stick to the guidelines but make sure growing conditions are within certain parameters.
So you see if I were you I would make my attitude 'assume failure, thank heavens if producing a dose of shrooms', but then learn a valuable lesson from this and start doing it correctly right away. Like I said, get some new stuff and a spore syringe from a substrain like Amazonian, Ecuadorian for *slightly* better colonization but not necessarily a better end result in the bigger picture - you best take the type of Cubensis boards and sites say is best for beginners. Why? Because they are robust and can take a hit, when growing treatment is not optimal like with people still learning the trade.
You can eat cereal from it, then sterile enough for cultivation. Are you kidding? Sterile means free from germs, germs can be any of the countless and countless fungus spores and bacteria we ingest and inhale each day. People don't need sterile utensils and dishes, just globally clean. That's why we have an immune system: to kill all these germs we encounter. However if the germs are introduced to nice fresh substrate, food you prepared especially for your Psilocybes, they will contaminate it because they like to eat it and grow there as well. Germs are not the real problem, they are only like little seeds. It's the things that grow from them similar to your mycelium - like macroscopically - that you need to worry about. Those sorts of things will fuck up your grow, and those are the sorts of things you should not eat by accident with your cereal because that can be too much for your body to handle and you might get sick.
[Actually, food poisoning then can often come not from the fungus and bacteria that are still alive but the toxic compounds they leave behind even when your body kills them]
yes with the emphasis on "rather"... rather than solely. Of course otherwise reproduction would really suck.
Although you can't grow just anything, like ectomycorhizzal species such as Amanita Muscaria.
In the case of ongos, no I'd bet my money on no result - and a particularly horrifying strain to pick if you are in such a hurry lol!! No offense dude, it's just that they are better for people who have had successful grows in the past (not including kits).
Here's a Tampanensis grow for example.
http://i53.tinypic.com/2hq78u8.jpg