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A Morel Community
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16694 |
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Section : |
MODERN THOUGHT
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10 / 1989 |
5,900 Words |
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Gary Alan Fine Gary Alan Fine is professor of sociology at the University of
Minnesota and the author of With the Boys: Little League
Baseball and Preadolescent Culture. |
Mushroomers, like the species they study, often can be found in clusters. Consider the Minnesota Mycological Society, founded shortly before the turn of the last century, making it the second oldest continuously active amateur mushroom (mycological) society in the United States. Like many organizations, it has within it various specific interest groups. Of the approximately two-hundred members, some--'amateur mycologists'--are primarily interested in studying mushrooms from a quasi-scientific perspective, "mushroom collectors" like making lists or collections of the mushrooms to eat (i.e., for the pot). For still others, photography is their first love.
The society meets once a week during the prime mushroom-picking months in Minnesota: May, June, September, and October. At these meetings the president describes the mushrooms that members have brought in and that the Identification Committee has identified. Members describe their special mushroom finds and, in general terms, will tell where and how they found them. At some meetings, members give talks--for example, on cultivating mushrooms or mushrooms in other nations--or show slides. The examination of fresh mushrooms is always the main order of business. In addition to these meetings, the club organizes a number of forays, with two lasting over a weekend. The club also holds a banquet during January and has a mycology study group that meets once a month to examine mushrooms with the aid of microscopes and chemicals.
For most Americans, mushrooms are not a topic that commands great interest--they are considered nice on spinach salad or something children are told to avoid, or perhaps they are seen as homes for elves. But generally, they are out of mind and, as a result, out of
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