[Home] [The Vaults] [Glossary] [Donate] [Sponsors] [Affiliates]
[Calendar] Mark Forums Read [VIP Chat] [Register] [Activate] [Resend Email]

Wild Mushrooming: Field and Forest Hunting edible wild mushrooms. Identifying wild mushrooms.


Welcome to the Mycotopia Web Forums
Membership Status -> Guest

Welcome to the Mycotopia Web Forums.

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features.

Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.

  • Before you [register] please verify your email account is valid and can accept email. All accounts require email activation.
  • You must [register] in order to access advanced community features.
  • Your account must be activated. If you need to activate your account manually, click [here]
  • If you need the activation email sent to you again, click [here]
  • Your account must be reviewed and approved by an Administrator before you may post. This usually takes less than 24-Hours.
  • To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.


  • Go Back   Mycotopia Web Forums > Board Discussions > Wild Mushrooming: Field and Forest

    Reply
     
    Thread Tools Display Modes
    Old 02-11-08, 15:43   #1 (permalink)
    Mycotopiate
     
    mjshroomer's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Sep 2007
    Posts: 1,251
    mjshroomer LEVEL +10 - IN GOOD STANDING
    Ben Woo Died Today

    Okay,

    I am assuming that most of you probably have never heard of Ben Woo.



    I first met Ben, along with Daniel Stuntz, Joy Spur and Dixie Lee Ray (Ex-Governor of Washington in 1976) at the university of Washington and the Puget Sound Mycological Society. Ben was a cordial friend who always treated me with kindness and he acknowledged my research and contributions in the field of Psilocybe as outstanding.

    I last saw him at a display table last October at the annual Puget Sound Mycological Society Mushroom Fair at the Seattle U of W. Horticulture Center. Pictures of that even will appear in Shroom Talk Magazine Issue number 5.

    Ben is a Chinese American who created the Puget Sound Mycological Society in 1964 with a few friends.

    I would like to extend my condolences to his friends and family here at Topia. For any of you members here in Seattle who are members of the PSMS, then you know to whom I am referring. IT was Ben's Photos which graced the pages of both Bob Harris', "Growing Wild Mushrooms"

    Reduced 59%
    298 x 480 (48.85k)


    and the two editions Of Homestead Book Companies, "Magikal Mushroom Handbook."

    1st Edition:
    Reduced 76%
    542 x 829 (119.49k)


    2nd Edition and smaller format with one photo by me of Conocybe cyanopus.
    Reduced 62%
    401 x 516 (67.28k)



    Excerpted From the Seattle Times
    Quote:
    The Ben Woo Scholarship:

    QUOTE


    Application Form



    Grant Guidelines

    The Puget Sound Mycological Society, a 501©(3) non- profit organization chartered in 1964, has established a small grant program in honor of its first president Benjamin Woo. Ben has personified our mission to foster the understanding of Mycology as a science and a hobby, and to assist related institutions in these purposes. As organization of volunteer amateur mycologists, the PSMS wishes to fund the projects of enthusiasts who need financial assistance to reach their goal related to the study of mycology.

    * Grants will be awarded for small amounts up to $2000 each calendar year.
    * Applications will be due July 1 and December 1.
    * Grants will be allocated for projects, studies, equipment and educational events related to Mycology.
    * Members of the Puget Sound Mycological Society and educators shall be given preference for the grants.
    * Recipients may be requested to present a report or program about the project.

    An application and guidelines may be downloaded below or contact Patrice Benson at: 206-722-0691 for application.
    Application Form

    Word Doc

    Rich Text Format
    About Ben Woo:

    Quote:
    MEET BEN WOO Inga Wilcox (1997) PSMS Newsletter:

    A founding member of PSMS, Ben Woo remembers the genesis of the society. In 1963 Dr. Dixie Lee Ray was Director of the Pacific Science Center. She wanted to build up public participation in the center by encouraging amateur science groups. She knew Dr. Daniel E. Stuntz, a noted mycologist at the University of Washington, who knew Ben Woo and others. In late the group sat down to talk about starting a society to study mushrooms. A notice in the paper brought in 85 interested persons, about two dozen of whom are still around. In 1964 the group formally incorporated, and Mr. Woo was elected its first president, serving till 1966. PSMS enjoyed guidance from the Oregon Mycological society, which had incorporated several years earlier. An annual exhibit, the survivor’s banquet, field trips, speakers at the monthly meetings, and a newsletter called Spore Prints became part of the format for the organization.

    How did Ben Woo get interested in fungi in the first place? Life Magazine ran a feature article on fungi complete with drawings and photographs, along with the warning “Do not go mushrooming without the help of an expert.” Mr. Woo decided he could become his own expert and proceeded to learn from books. His interest still is mainly scientific, cookery on the side. He never took formal classes, although he was a long-time friend of Dr. Stuntz.

    The genus Russula has been his object of study for 20–28 years. It is a challenge! There are many species, many incorrectly named or not named at all; mycologists stay away from the genus (it’s too time consuming). There are 200 species in the Northwest alone. (A Ph.D. candidate working on russulas, collecting for 3 years, found 85 species, only 50 of which had a name attached.)

    Processing a collection of russulas takes time. Ben Woo needs to clean the specimens, measure and photograph them, write a description, do a spore print, smell and taste the fungi, and conduct a chemical test. Then the Russula can be dried to be reconstituted later for microscopic work, preparing tiny pieces of stem, cap, and gills and making drawings of the various parts. For about a year, Ben Woo has been working on improving his home computer to eliminate the tedious step of drawing microscopic slides. He wants to come up with a computer capable of photographing microscopic parts. (Bill G. watch out!) Besides russulas, Mr. Woo enjoys studying and photographing boletes, Lactarius, and Hygrophorus. It is a wonderful activity which keeps him healthy and interested, along with downhill skiing.

    Currently, Mr. Woo is president of the Pacific Northwest Key Council and is the North American Mycological Society’s regional trustee for the Pacific Northwest. A retired architect with 30 years in the profession, he is serving, and has served, on many community-related boards: The Chinese Nursing Home Society (with a building recently completed); the Lighthouse for The Blind; the Chinatown Preservation and Development Authority; Facility and Construction for King County.

    Thirty-three years after its inception, PSMS has many members. And Ben Woo is continuing his studies, still hoping that “people learn not to kick over russulas.”
    All at PSMS are happy to have a Founding Father in our midst. Thank you, Ben.

    Quote:
    "Uncle Ben" was leader among Asian Americans
    By Amy Martinez
    Seattle Times staff reporter
    Ben Woo held many titles: Architect. King County construction chief. Mushroom expert.

    Mr. Woo died Friday from heart failure after suffering a stroke in November. He was 84.

    Mr. Woo, the son of a Chinese laundryman, was born June 15, 1923, in Seattle. Growing up, he was allowed "no dawdling after school" and was expected to head "directly home to work in the laundry," he told Chew for his 1995 book, "Reflections of Seattle's Chinese Americans: The First 100 Years."

    Mr. Woo attended Queen Anne High School and went on to study meteorology at the University of Chicago. A weather forecaster for the Army Air Corps during World War II, Mr. Woo once told The Seattle Times that he was a "lousy forecaster — guessing wrong most of the time," so he pursued mechanical engineering at the UW and ultimately opened an architectural firm in Madison Park.

    "Ben bridged the gap between the business community and the more progressive Asian-American community," Santos said. "I really give Ben a lot of credit for the preservation of the International District as the center of Asian culture in the Northwest."

    Mr. Woo's numerous titles included director of King County's Construction and Facilities Management Department, president of the Seattle chapter of the American Institute of Architects, and head of the Chinatown-International District Preservation and Development Authority.
    An original supporter of the Wing Luke Asian Museum, Mr. Woo also created the Puget Sound Mycological Society in 1964 with a small group of other mushroom enthusiasts, , including Dixy Lee Ray, then director of the Pacific Science Center. Ray later served one term as Washington governor.

    mjshroomer
    mjshroomer is offline   Reply With Quote
    Old 02-11-08, 15:49   #2 (permalink)
    Admin
     
    Hippie3's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Feb 2001
    Posts: 36,316
    Hippie3 has disabled reputation
    __________________
    GROW SUPPLIES: www.Mycrotopia.com
    ------------Simply The Best------------
    Namaste
    Temet Nosce
    Hippie3 is offline   Reply With Quote
    Old 02-11-08, 17:02   #3 (permalink)
    Critter Keeper
     
    Beastmaster's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Feb 2005
    Posts: 2,135
    Beastmaster LEVEL +250 : HONORABLEBeastmaster LEVEL +250 : HONORABLEBeastmaster LEVEL +250 : HONORABLE
    RIP
    __________________
    'Any fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes genius and courage to move in the opposite direction.' AE
    Beastmaster is offline   Reply With Quote
    Old 02-11-08, 22:41   #4 (permalink)
    Mycotopiate
     
    cleanjar's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Sep 1971
    Posts: 1,037
    cleanjar LEVEL 0 - UNRATED
    well i am sorry to hear about your friend

    he must have been a outstanding person
    cleanjar is offline   Reply With Quote
    Reply

    « (Previous Thread) Indiana | ID request - Southern California (Next Thread) »


    Similar Threads
    Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
    655,000 Iraqis have died since 2003 aumbrellaforainydays Resist & Rebel 45 10-20-06 18:30
    Eatyu's strawnet Journal eatyualive Mushroom Grow Logs 56 04-02-06 21:11
    Damnit i got fired earlier today... alounacara Trash Talk 19 04-02-06 11:31
    My cat died perrch01 General Discussions 24 04-11-05 07:23
    My cat nearly died perrch01 General Discussions 31 03-14-05 01:11

    [The Vaults] [VIP Chat] [Calendar] [Donate] [Sponsors] [Page Top] [Register]
    Thread Tools
    Display Modes

    Posting Rules
    You may not post new threads
    You may not post replies
    You may not post attachments
    You may not edit your posts

    vB code is On
    Smilies are On
    [IMG] code is On
    HTML code is Off
    Trackbacks are Off
    Pingbacks are Off
    Refbacks are Off

     


    All times are GMT -5. The time now is 21:38.



    Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.11
    Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
    Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.1.0


    All trademarks are © their respective owners, all other content is © Mycotopia 2000/2008
    Site Designed and Hosted By | Zen Media Services




    [Output: 63.49 Kb. compressed to 60.31 Kb. by saving 3.19 Kb. (5.02%)]