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Mushroom Courses

 
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Tropical Fungi Academy is bringing you all new mushroom courses in the coming new year! We've been listening to our community about what you want to learn & we're excited to share with you these four upcoming courses & an apprenticeship.
Each of the following courses includes five online educational class presentations and Q-&-A sessions with teachers.


Do you want to learn how to grow your own edible mushrooms? We have been testing out all sorts of ways to grow mushrooms. We have curated this course to teach you the easiest methods with the best track record of success.
5:30-7pm HST | Tuesdays | Jan 10th, 2023 | Feb 14th, 2023 | Mar 14th, 2023 | May 9th, 2023 | Jun 13th, 2023
Early Bird Special: $199 (code: fullcourse)
Learn More & Get Tickets Here


So you found a mushroom? Great! Can you eat it?! This course will teach you the simple tools you will need to positively identify mushrooms found growing wild around you.
5:30-7pm HST | Wednesdays | Jan 11th, 2023 | Feb 15th, 2023 | Mar 15th, 2023 | May 10th, 2023 | Jun 14th, 2023
Early Bird Special: $199 (code: fullcourse)
Learn More & Get Tickets Here


This course will teach you how to take the microscopic & turn it into food. From foraged mushroom to spawn, we teach you how to grow mushroom mycelium!
5:30-7pm HST | Fridays | Jan 13th, 2023 | Feb 17th, 2023 | Mar 17th, 2023 | May 12th, 2023 | Jun 16th, 2023
Early Bird Special: $199 (code: fullcourse)
Learn More & Get Tickets Here


Mycorestoration is the practice of partnering with fungi to heal soil & water that has been contaminated with pollutants. We will cover the basics, scientific case studies, accessibility & applicability, as well as DIY experiments.
5:30-7pm HST | Mondays | Jan 9th, 2023 | Feb 13th, 2023 | Mar 13th, 2023 | May 8th, 2023 | Jun 12th, 2023
Early Bird Special: $199 (code: fullcourse)
Learn More & Get Tickets Here

Note: all courses will be recorded, so if you happen to miss any one of the classes do not worry. We will make recordings available to you.

EARLY BIRD SPECIAL
All the above courses are currently discounted at an early bird special price for a limited time.

Use the discount code fullcourse when getting ticket to any of the above courses to get the sale price of $199 (regular price $225).

Mushroom Education FOR ALL
No one turned away for lack of funds. Contact us for sliding-scale pricing, work-trade opportunities, barter, & scholarships.

Our Latest Mushroom Educational Offerings Here.

Thank you.  :-)
 
Mike Kenzie
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NEW DATES! (Hopefully an admin can edit the dates on these courses above)

Course Name:
Mycorestoration: Laboratory to Landscape | More Info & Sign-Up Link Here

March 13th, 2023 | May 8th, 2023 | June 12th, 2023 | July 10th, 2023 | August 14th, 2023

Course Description:
Mycorestoration is the practice of strategically partnering with decomposer (saprophytic) fungi to heal soil and water that has been contaminated with pollutants ranging from E. coli to petroleum. This embodiment of the remediative biotechnology is based on the fungi’s evolved ability to acquire nutrients - they just want snacks! In this course, we will cover the mycorestoration basics, scientific case studies, mycorestoration in the context of the Red Hill crisis on Oʻahu, accessibility and applicability across Hawaiʻi, and DIY experiments.



---

Also, new dates on our Spawn Course; it's now an intensive: March 20th, 2023 | March 21st, 2023 | March 22nd, 2023 | March 23rd, 2023 | March 24th, 2023
 
Mike Kenzie
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Documenting Mushroom Diversity in the Tropics | Dr. Dennis E. Desjardin


Sunday, May 7th 10am - 11:30am (HST) [1pm Pacific time] online presentation with Q-&-A

Fungi represent one of the more diverse groups of organisms with no fewer than 3.5 millionspecies estimated to occur globally. But less than 300,000 have been formally documented,including only about 20,000 mushroom-forming species. We also know there is a high diversityof mushrooms in tropical habitats that have a great diversity of plant species and that thesehabitats are underexplored by mycologists. Needless to say, much work needs to be done. Mytalk “Documenting Mushroom Diversity in the Tropics” will present data from my field studiesin the Hawaiian Islands, Micronesia, Indo-Malaysia, West Africa and South America. I will focuson how we conduct the field work, what it takes to document taxonomically significant data,how to determine what a species is, understanding taxonomy versus nomenclature, and finally,how to put an accurate name on mushrooms from areas where we know little about mushroomdiversity. I will present several case studies to support the process of and the need to documentmushrooms in the tropics.

Brief Bio – Dr. Dennis E. Desjardin

Dr. Dennis E. Desjardin retired from San Francisco State University after 31 years as Professor in the Department of Biology, and Director and Curator of the H.D. Thiers Herbarium. He was born and raised in Del Norte County, CA, where he developed his love of fungi, collecting mushrooms from the age of three with his immigrant grandparents. He attended San Jose State from 1968–1971 as a math major, then dropped out to play music and build homes in the SF Bay Area. After a ten year hiatus, he returned to college to study mycology with Dr. Harry D. Thiers at San Francisco State, earning a BS in Biology–Botany (1983) and a MA in Ecology and Systematic Biology (1985). He received a PhD in Botany from the University of Tennessee in 1989, then taught at Oberlin College for one year. Dr. Desjardin returned to his alma mater in 1990 to continue Dr. Thiers’ legacy of mycological teaching and research. At SF State, he taught numerous general biology, botany and mycology courses at both undergraduate and graduate levels, mentoring 23 Masters and 5 PhD students of which 68% were female and 25% were from under-represented minority groups. His research focuses on the distribution, ecology and evolution of mushroom-forming fungi. Supported by eight National Science Foundation grants, he has conducted field studies in the Hawaiian Islands, Micronesia, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, West Africa, Brazil and western USA. He has published over 150 refereed scientific papers, described over 300 new species of mushrooms, and co-authored two popular field guides, Mushrooms of Hawaii and California Mushrooms. Over the past decade he has become recognized as a world’s authority on bioluminescent fungi. Dr. Desjardin was the first recipient of SF State’s Distinguished Faculty Award for Excellence in Professional Achievement, and he is an elected Fellow of the California Academy of Sciences and the Mycological Society of America. In “retirement” Dr. Desjardin is now the Chief Mycologist for Sempera Organics, a start-up company that grows functional fungi for nutraceuticals and has launched a new mushroom and mycelium-based meat alternative called Mamu.

TICKETS AVAILABLE HERE
 
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