A free, family‑friendly celebration of all things fungi — from tastings and talks to hands‑on crafts — featuring special guest Julie Beeler of the Mushroom Color Atlas. Join the community for a spring day of learning, exploring, and mushroom‑powered fun.
Whether you want to draw mushrooms, grow them, or just geek out on the intrigue of fungi, this year’s workshops have you covered. Artist Chris Adams leads a lively dive into sketching mushrooms from life, while Jennifer Livingston guides participants through the fundamentals of agar plates, grain jars, and home cultivation. It’s a double‑dose of creativity and mycology for curious minds.
May 2, 2026 at the spring mushroom festival. Buy tickets here.
Chris Adams:
How to draw a mushroom with Chris Adams
Join artist Chris Adams (the human behind Corvidopolis, The Mushroom Tarot and Sporelust!), to discuss & practice basic techniques for drawing anything––but in this case mushrooms & other inspirational beings from the natural world. Chris will describe his basic processes of drawing from the real world & photographic reference, work with the class on some fun experimentations with common media and outline his approach to combining personal creative inspiration with accurate––sometimes scientific––observation. Each attendee receives a small notepad and a brush pen, but please feel free to bring your favorite media!
Times: 9:30am and 1pm, each will last 60 minutes.
Jennifer Livingston:
Mushroom Cultivation: Making and using agar plates and grain jars
This class will cover:
How to make and use a Still Air Box
How to make "pour first, then sterilize" agar plates, (using reusable plastic containers);
How to inoculate the agar plates;
How to prepare grain for a grain jar;
Suggestions for making lids for grain jars;
How to sterilize the grain jars before inoculation;
How to tell when the grain jars are ready for transfer to a substrate, or for drying;
Tips for safely using a pressure cooker; and
Suggestions for teachers to learn from on YouTube.
Each attendee will receive their own agar plate inoculated with reishi!
*All proceeds from the purchase of these tickets will go directly to the SSMC scholarship fund!
Times: 9:30am and 3pm, each will last 60 minutes.
Can you relate to memories of walking through Staircase's emerald green forests, with massive trees towering overhead? Trees covered in moss and lichens...trees that have held generations of stories and treasured moments. Or perhaps you fondly can recall the never-ending climb to Wagonwheel Lake or Cub Peak? There are countless other areas included in the 20,232 acres that burned in the 2025 Bear Gulch III fire. This area was a special place to many of us in the South Sound, and I am no exception. I am the SSMC newsletter editor and a lover of hiking, climbing, backpacking, and mushroaming. With the Olympics so close by, I often found myself there on the weekends, whether it was under the shining summer sun or in the moody, misty winter rain. The thought that a devastating fire could change our beloved playground never even entered my mind. Until it happened. Reeling from the shock and sadness, I decided to channel some of those sorrowful emotions into creating a video. What you see below is a reflection and tribute to everything we love about the Olympics: the enchanted forests and bubbling rivers, jagged peaks, alpine lakes, abundant wildlife, and the delightful array of fungi that fascinate us and bring us together. The area has burned before and came back. It will come back again.
Huge thanks to the individuals who contributed stories and photos to this collection! It would not have been possible without you.
A new species found by the club - Chromosera loreleiae
Luaren Ré photographing the new species in the field
The mushroom world has been introduced to a new mushroom species name with some roots in the PNW and with a SSMC sequencing contribution. With a yell of excitement, Sadie Hickey from SSMC found this mushroom while attending the Key Council meeting near Mt Adams in 2019. The new name has just now been formally introduced, a name also with PNW connections. The mushroom was named in honor of Lorelei Norvell an extremely well respected mycologist working much of her career in the PNW. Lorelei Norvell was especially interested in Phaeocollybia and is author of Phaeocollybia of the Pacific Northwest North America. Lorelei interest was very broad though and included work with Scott Redhead and Joe Ammirati on the Chromosera genus.
Lorelei and Sadie were both attending the Key Council when Sadie made the collection and how appropriate that this absolutely gorgeous mushroom will now forever honor Loreleis' name. Unfortunately Lorelei died in 2023 between the time Sadie collected the mushroom and before it gained species status. There was an obvious excitement as we took turns getting a picture of the mushroom. The picture here is of Lauren taking her turn as you can see the determination and dedication to get a quality picture. Lauren Ré and Sadie and an old carpenter on Little Skookum all members of SSMC are listed as authors on the just released species paper. Congratulations are in order to Sadie for being one top notch collector.
March 17, 2026 7:00 pm - "The Edible Fungi of Spring " with Langdon Cook - Capital Vision Church
April 21, 2026 7:00 pm - Demystifying Binomial Nomenclature with Rose Tursi - Capital Vision Church
Why we use binomials, the basics of modern Latin grammatical forms, and the etymology behind the most commonly used terms. Don't let all that fool you though, this is actually quite an entertaining spin on an inherently dull topic! If scientific names have always intimidated you, you'll get a kick out of this talk. Plus you'll learn some cool tricks that will make you look like a super genius at parties!
May 2, 2026 10:00 am - 3:00 pm - Spring Mushroom Festival - Capital Vision Church
Sequencing continues to get cheaper and as it does and more mushrooms get sequenced with fascinating new discoveries. This creates a need to give mushrooms that one day will likely be given species status a temporary “Provisional” name. Read about that process here.