Using spent mushroom blocks for cultivation and soil remediation
How can I find out more about fruiting these blocks or using them for other applications? We’ve scheduled a Zoom lecture with three panel presentations by […]
How can I find out more about fruiting these blocks or using them for other applications? We’ve scheduled a Zoom lecture with three panel presentations by […]
We are once again partnering with Smallhold for yet more fruiting blocks giveaways to our members. If your last block didn't work out, if you'd like a few more or if the previous date didn't fit your schedule, you're in luck. Smallhold will be giving away spent blocks of Blue Oyster mushrooms and Lion's Mane
We are once again partnering with Smallhold for yet more fruiting blocks giveaways to our members. If your last block didn’t work out if you’d like […]
This is a joint walk with the James Baldwin Outdoor Learning Center. Its goal is to introduce JBOLC's local Bronx community to the wonderful world of […]
Details to come
The Gary Lincoff Book Auction will be held on Sunday December 4th at 1PM in TriBeCa. Tickets are required to attend this event and attendance will […]
Our first talk will look at the history of popular interest in fungi and mushroom clubs. Tracing popular mushroom foraging to the 1880s, DeDe-Panken will discuss an early iteration of American mycophilia which brought a new population of non-professional mushroomers into the field. Like today, they sought a combination of gastronomic, scientific and personal enrichment. She'll argue that the mushroom fad legitimized women’s participation in citizen science by tethering foraging knowledge to elevated, economical cookery and as a public safety necessity to prevent poisoning. Enthusiastic laywomen claimed space and belonging as collectors, writers, illustrators, and club leaders. Yet while expanding opportunities for some, privileged mycologists’ insistence on certain forms of expertise fueled exclusion along class, race and ethnic lines. Ultimately, this research seeks to elucidate tensions surrounding sustenance, science and authority that remain with us to this day.
Rosanne Healy will talk about travels and work to better understand the relationships, ecology, and life history of the group of fungi that we know as “the cup fungi”. These are the fungi that include the famous black perigord truffles, delectable morels, and iconic scarlet cups. They also include many lesser known, but fascinating truffles and cup-shaped, columniform, and saddle-shaped fungi.
Please join us for the club's annual business meeting which will once again take place via Zoom. Normally the business meeting is a lively social event and we do hope to return to meeting in person in 2024.
We will review the Society's plans for the year and discuss a variety of matters at hand.
All members are welcome. I look forward to seeing you there!
Using examples from research that has been done on specimens from the Farlow fungarium I will outline how these specimens contribute to modern taxonomic and systematic studies and how curatorial practices contribute to or distract from accurate study of collections. How was it possible to determine that a species suspected to be extinct was found to be widespread in eastern North America? What can collections tell us about the high and unexpected diversity of species of an often-collected genus of tropical fungi? Where was Charles Wright when he collected Puccinia triarticulata and how did he get there? These and other questions will be examined through the eye of a long serving curator.
Fungi are weird, fungi are cool, and fungi are beautiful. But how much do we really know about them? For starters, they do much more than just rot things. They control pretty much all life on our planet and are everywhere. Britt Bunyard’s lecture will present fascinating stories and beautiful photos of amazing fungi featured in his latest book. Discover the crazy, wonderful life that goes on all around us, mostly hidden in plain sight. For general audiences, no knowledge of mycology is required. This lecture is based on features from Bunyard’s new book, The Lives of Fungi, A Natural History of Our Planet's Decomposers.
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