Current Year Mushroom Festival
Be sure to attend the Special CMS Presentation to be held on Friday, Oct 25th.
Mushroom Activities by CMS and LCC
The Mushroom Festival is located at and is organized by the Mount Pisgah Arboretum. If you are a vendor and want to participate, or want more details about all of the festival activities and logistics, check out the Mount Pisgah Arboretum Mushroom Festival page.
The Cascade Mycological Society (CMS) along with Lane Community College (LCC) students in the Biology of Mushroom class taught by Susie Holmes are responsible for putting “the mushrooms in the mushroom festival”. Together we search from the Cascades to the Coast to collect every species of mushroom we can find. Then, we invite nationally recognized mycologists to help us with identifying the mushrooms we collect; along with our local CMS experts. Only the mushrooms that are identified to both genus and species (or group/complex), are put on display. In addition to the mushroom display, you won’t want to miss the following CMS and LCC provided displays and activities:
- Bring mushrooms to be identified to our “Ask an Expert” table, located at the front of the White Oak Pavilion, where the main mushroom display is located.
- Check out the Fungi Science Tent, sponsored by our partner Lane Community College.
- Both kids and adults can learn about fungi at the “Fun Fungal Facts” tent.
- Be sure to visit our “Edible, Poisonous and Look-Alikes” tent to learn about some mushroom species to enjoy and some others to avoid! This display is staffed all day with experienced CMS members who can answer your questions.
- And don’t forget to visit the CMS booth, where t-shirts, cookbooks, and other mushrooms accessories will be for sale.
Want to learn more about how the MPA Mushroom Festival got started in 1981? Check out the History of the MPA Mushroom Festival to learn how then LCC Professor Freeman Rowe and CMS members-to-be started this fabulous festival to benefit the Mount Pisgah Arboretum.
Guest Mushroom Experts
CMS is happy to welcome back guest experts Steve Trudell and Noah Siegel this year. Local CMS experts Ron Hamill, Joe Spivack, Bitty Roy and others will also assist with mushroom identification. Lane Community College (LCC) Professor Susie Holmes and her Biology of Mushrooms students will assist with getting all of the identified mushrooms onto the display. While CMS members Bruce Newhouse & Peg Boulay will coordinate all of the CMS mushroom displays coming together.
Noah and Steve will be the primary experts staffing the Expert Identification Table. Bring your mushrooms for identification or just have a chat with these two PNW Myco Stars. You can also purchase their books and have them signed!
Steve Trudell is a forest ecologist and itinerant educator, who has been hunting, photographing, and learning about mushrooms for nearly 50 years. Currently an affiliate curator at the University of Washington Herbarium, he received his bachelors and masters degrees in Geology from the University of California, Santa Barbara and PhD in Forest Ecosystems Analysis from the University of Washington. Author or co-author of Mushrooms of the Pacific Northwest, Tricholomas of North America, Mushrooms of the National Forest in Alaska, and the forthcoming Mushrooms of Alaska, he has taught mycology, botany, and biology courses at the University of Washington, The Evergreen State College, and Bastyr University, as well as workshops at many North American Mycological Association and local forays and festivals. His particular interest is in the roles that fungi play in forest carbon and nutrient cycling, especially the mycorrhizal species.
Noah Siegel, co-author of Mushrooms of the Redwood Coast and Mushrooms of Cascadia, has extensive mycology skills – with over three decades seeking, photographing, identifying, and furthering his knowledge about macrofungi. He has hunted for mushrooms throughout the United States and Canada, as well as on multiple expeditions to New Zealand and Australia and Cameroon. He is one of the premier mushroom photographers in the nation, having won numerous awards from the North American Mycological Association (NAMA) photography contest. His technique and attention to detail are unrivaled, arising from a philosophy of maximizing utility for identification purposes while maintaining a high degree of aesthetic appeal. His photographs have appeared on the covers and have been featured in articles of multiple issues of FUNGI Magazine, the primary mushroom enthusiast magazines in the United States, numerous mushroom books, as well as many club publications. Noah lives in Michigan, but travels and lectures extensively across America, following the mushrooms from coast to coast, and everywhere in between.
Talks on the Terrace
Talks on the Terrace is for all of you fungal foodies! CMS Foodie Heather Sielicki will be on hand to emcee a full line up of mushroom experts and chefs who will teach you how to select, prepare, and preserve your favorite fungal finds.
10:45 to 11:30 – Valerie Nguyen, Fungi for the People – Mushroom bao buns with medicinal mushroom chili crisp oil and Reishi tea tasting. If you have never had bao buns, learn about them here.
12pm to 12:45 – Trent Blizzard, President of the North American Mycological Association – Preserving Wild Mushrooms
1:15 to 2:00 – Kristen Blizzard of Modern Forager – Pickling Perceptions – Invigorate your favorite recipes with pickled mushrooms.
2:30 to 3:15 – Bob Rudel of Rainforest Mushrooms will talk about Care and Feeding of your Mushroom Kit
3:45 to 4:30 – Chef David Erickson of Painting with food will teach you how to make his signature Mushroom canapés
Other Activities by Mount Pisgah Arboretum
The Mount Pisgah Arboretum makes sure everyone in the family, has an entire day of fun! Not a mushroom fan, that’s OK. There are plenty of other activities that make this fall festival a favorite among the local community from the Cascades to the Coast. Below are some of the fun activities that the Mount Pisgah Arboretum staff organizes. Feel free to check out more details at the MPA Mushroom Festival Website.
- Live Music from 10 AM to 5 PM
- Hay Rides along the Arboretum’s scenic Meadow Road
- Guided Nature Walks by local naturalists
- The infamous and yummy hot apple cider booth!
- A Kids’ Booth with face painting and nature crafts
- Vendor booths: Crafts, fresh mushrooms, mushroom kits, food and beverages
- The Fantastical Scarecrow Contest; vote for your favorites!
The Mushroom Display Myco Blitz
The mushroom festival mycoblitz is just one more way to get involved in supporting both the mushroom festival and citizen science. The mycoblitz will take place Oct. 19th through Oct. 28th and include mushrooms observed in Lane County and within about 20 miles outside of the county line: basically Newport to past Reedsport on the Coast, Albany to Roseburg in the interior, Mt. Jefferson (almost) south to Mt. Thielson in the Cascades, and east to Bend. If you upload with a large (vague) observation circle, ALL of the circle must be within the boundary for the observation to be counted in.
All INat observations of fungi that match the Mushroom Show Mycoblitz requirements (date, location, and taxa), will automatically be included in the Mycoblitz event. Please do not include lichenized fungi (lichens), but you may include slime molds (because many closely resemble fungi, and we include them in the the festival display). Click the button below to view the mycoblitz project on iNaturalist, then read on for instructions on how to contribute to the mycoblitz.
If you have used iNaturalist (iNat) before, you should be good to go. Just start uploading mushroom observations that fit the date and place limits of this project, and they will show up in the Lane County Mushroom Show Mycoblitz event project.
If you have not used iNat before, we recommend you take a little time to familiarize yourself with it. Simply visit iNaturalist’s Getting Started Page and read the instructions for uploading observations. Once you familiarize yourself with the process, try some practice uploading (you can always delete something that you uploaded as a test).
Mushroom Photo Tips
It is especially important to note that mushroom ID by others (associated with iNat, and the intent of this project) is difficult and sometimes impossible to do from photos. If you would like your photos to be counted for the project and have a higher chance of getting an ID by someone, take and upload MULTIPLE photos of each specimen from different angles, especially showing the underneath side. For example, if you find an Amanita, photograph the top, photograph the underside (use your selfie lens and slip the camera under the mushroom cap and photograph to show gill attachment), photograph the stem base and volva by gently digging out around the base a little to expose them, and then hold the camera back several feet and photograph the whole mushroom in its surroundings. That is 4 photos in this example, which would be submitted together as ONE observation. Feel free to submit more photos (e.g., spores in your scope view if you have one?), but please do not submit any that essentially are duplicates. See the photo tips also on iNat . If you find something special or interesting, consider making it a collection for the Macrofungi of Lane County, Oregon (MLCO) project. MLCO is the ongoing CMS fungal diversity study. Visit the CMS MLCO web page for more information and to watch tutorials.
Upload mushroom photo observations taken in Lane County from October 17 through October 26, 2024. We set this project’s dates to simulate the traditional collection time of about a week before the show, scheduled to occur on Sunday, October 27th. So the photo observations that get included in this iNat Mycoblitz should be those that would be out during the time they otherwise would have been collected for the show. You can submit by Nov. 1, but note the dates for actual observation end before that! The show usually includes around 400 to 500+ different wild mushrooms collected from Lane County and nearby. Please message us in iNat if you have any questions about the iNat Mycoblitz, and see the Mount Pisgah Arboretum web site for more info.