NMMS News - May 1998
Myxomycete Workshop a Success
    Thank you Dr. Keller for driving up from Texas and giving an excellent Slime Mold Workshop. We feel fortunate and honored that you chose to share with us your time and expertise. Thanks also to Ted for providing tools and for scouting out likely habitats. And thanks particularly to Doris, whose inspiration and energy brought it all together and made it such a success.
    Although we spent a good part of our time in the laboratory (thanks also to the UNM Biology Dept), we did get out for a refreshing field session on the east side of the Sandias. Rooting around the fringes of snowbanks, we did manage to find abundant sporangia, though not much in the plasmodial stage. (In fact, we enjoyed those snowbanks so much, that this last weekend we decided to make some more.) I confess that I was somewhat enthusiastic: scraping away snow, overturning boulders, uprooting trees, and so on. As an aside, I did find fruiting under the snow a nice specimen of Discina perlata. We began our search at around 7300 feet and after driving up the road a bit, we hit pay dirt (or is that pay slime?) at about 8300.
    One of the more amusing aspects of the workshop was Dr. Keller's response to one or two of Ruth's Petri dish mini-myxo gardens. Her juniper bark had become host to a small universe of tiny organisms. Dr. Keller could could scarcely quell his exclamations of enthusiasm as he discovered one after another.
Last Month's Talk
    While we're distributing Thank you's, we have a big one for Paul Chan, who at our last meeting gave a very informative talk about his experience with Matsutake harvesting in the Pacific Northwest. Paul spent five years with the Forest Service, and came prepared with both stories and statistics.
    He presented the pickers as latter day 49'ers, rushing in from all parts of the U.S. and Canada, as well as from other parts of the world. They arrive in droves, many harboring visions of easy wealth. Some do well, but most are lucky to make enough pay for their expenses.
    Mr. Chan discounted the horror stories of zealous mushroomers engaging in bloody turf wars. He exposed it as so much Media hype. Some folks carry a firearm, usually used only for signaling. And the massive knives people carry work quite well as harvesting tools. As he said, if there had been any bloodshed, the Forest Service would have ceased issuing permits and just closed the areas to harvesting.
Larry's Cultivation Booklet on Web
    Some members may have already seen Larry Weingarten's mushroom cultivation paper entitled "I Grow Mushrooms." He has written an easy to follow procession through the various steps of growing mushrooms, from hauling in straw to picking the mushrooms. These steps he accompanies with a collection of color photos. The paper lived for a while on the NAMA website and is still available on MycoWest.net.
Recipe Books
    We have received a couple of offers to buy Recipe books at a reasonable cost. The first, which came to us just prior to the last meeting, is for a work entitled From Duff to Dinner, offered by Seasonal Feasts in Los Gatos, California. The flyer they sent offers us a 40% discount, which with shipping charges puts the cost at about $10 a book. I'll bring the information again to this month's meeting.
    The other offer comes from a couple of members of the Minnesota club. They've put together a booklet of "over 30 tips and recipes" entitled The Mystical Morel. (They should visit New Mexico to discover just how mystical the Morel can be.) Anyway, they're asking 5 bucks for their little book. (For each five we buy, they'll even throw in number six for free.) Such a deal. I'll have the info at the meeting for those interested.
~c4x