SHROOMFEST42... A marvelous year. Everything came together ... The afternoon monsoons started in early July amidst a record drought and haven’t stopped yet. Warm days heated the soil at altitude ... Britt Bunyard gathered a wonderful group of presenters. Festival staffers (calling themselves Team Cooperation) Ashley Smith, Matt Guertin and Teal Stetson-Lee got operations under firm control for the smoothest production in years. The Telluride Institute’s Team Mushroom provided decision-making oversight. Over 500 people bought passes ...
Sunny days alternating with late day rains made perfect foray weather. The lectures were extraordinary, particularly those of Mark Plotkin, Giuliana Furci, Tradd Cotter and Irene Dubin, as well as John Michelotti, Peter Hendricks, Lauren Czaplicki, and Bryn Dentinger, Louie Schwartzberg’s new film “Gratitude Revealed” had many of us crying in our seats, awed by the beauty. The MycoLicious MycoLuscious MycoLogical Poetry Show had itkis audience riveted to the performances. John Sir Jesse and Katrina Blair had very successful dinner specials. The vendors brought a whole new level of myco-surprises and delights. My favorite was PACT -- a toolkit for pooping in the woods: visit there website HERE...
Riitta Ikonen offered a delightful costume playground (aka “workshop”) pre-parade. The parade was spectacular and the djembe drum & dance circle in the Town Park was ecstatic thanks to West African master Etienne Tolno with Skyler Hollinbeck and his crew of locals ... And that’s just some highlights. The entire week was magical with many other wonderful people, events and interactions. Kudos to all.
PAUL STAMETS ... Our great Fungophile sent a wonderful video to this year's event from his home in British Columbia and honored me with this short segment.
“I can't express to you all how much it means to me that you keep the TMF alive (and thriving!) As Rick Hollinbeck said (and to paraphrase/mirror his words), to many of us, it is as much a giant family reunion as it is a festival. I am closer to so many people I see in Telluride once a year than I am to many people I see almost daily. There is some bitter sweet for the people who are no longer with us but their legacy that you all keep alive brings me literally to tears of emotion when I think about it (yes, my vision is blurry and my cheeks are wet as I write these comments). So from me, and so many others, to every one of you and your volunteers and everyone at the Telluride Institute, THANK YOU! from the bottom of my heart and soul.”
The kids have grown up with the festival and Rick & Marty have been with us since day one. Congratulations to my Norwood homies.
FASCINATING FACTOID ... According to the brilliant Dr. Bryn Dentiger of the University of Utah, what we have started calling Boletus rubiceps may be an incorrect name, and what we actually have is a variety of B. edulis after all. Taxonomy is perhaps the most confusing of all disciplines in the mycological world ... However, Bryn is no dogmatist and suggests we call mushrooms whatever we like, depending on the context we’re in. So, in the field, if not in the lab, I’m calling one of my favorite mushrooms the redhead, taxonomists notwithstanding.
INDIGENOUS CRITIQUE ... Graeber & Wengrow’s The Dawn of Everything (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2021) – easily the most important historical treatise I’ve read since Dolores LaChapelle’s Sacred Land Sacred Sex Rapture of the Deep (Finn Hill Arts, out of print) – documents the fascinating argument that itki was the Indigenous North American critique of Western Civilization, as was encountered after Columbus, that led directly to the Enlightenment and the American and French revolutions. A must read ... If you don’t know the Wendat Philosopher-Statesman Kandiaronk as described by Louis Armand, Baron de Lahonton, in the early 1700s in New Voyages to North America, read Robin Wall Kimmerer’s Braiding Sweetgrass to learn what Indigenous Wisdom means.
-Kathleen Cain