Learn and share skills around isolating and cloning functionally sterile mushroom tissue. Build your own mycoculture library! This is a practice- based workshop and requires no prior knowledge. Don't sweat it, this is not rocket science š Bring your best hand/ eye coordination skills and learn the first stages of practical mushroom culture. Take away awesome samples to start your very own culture library.
The fruits of this workshop can be used to upscale and grow your own edible, and medicinal mushrooms, and many more species can be cloned and stored at home for further research ( and some tasty feeds ) using the techniques we will teach on the day. Over the last decade, advances in mushroom cultivation made cloning and storage easier- and available to any citizen scientist who has access to a standard kitchen. We'll be focusing on the Rush Wayne Hydrogen Peroxide cloning tek, but there will be other teks taught during this workshop as well. If you have mycological Mad Skillz already, you're also welcome to attend. So many mushrooms in Australia are unidentified or unknown to Western Science. So much potential. So many opportunities for everyone to play a part.
Please Note: This workshop is separate from the Intensive workshop being held on the 2nd of December.
-----------------------------------------------

Caine Barlow is a Mycologist and Fungi Educator based in Melbourne, Australia.Ā He gives regular talks on mycology, fungi conservation, and teaches gourmet mushroom cultivation.Ā He is a member of the Australian organisations Entheogenesis Australis, MYCOmmunity Applied Mycology, The Australian Psychedelic Society, and the Entheome Foundation.
Caine started foraging for mushrooms in the early 1990's, and started cultivating gournet fungi in the mid 2000's. He did his Bachelor of Science at the University of Tasmania, and a Master of Science at the University of Melbourne where his research project was based around Conservation Mycology.
In addition to fungi, Caine has had a long term interest in ethnobotany, ethnobotanical literature, Ā and growing medicinal plants - in particular Cacti and Acacias. He writes for DoubleBlind and ThirdWave, is a āTrusted Identifierā on The Shroomery, and a moderator on many Facebook fungi groups. Caine posts regularly on his Instagram, @guerrillamycology, sharing adventures from cultivation, foraging, and ethnomycology, to interesting observations from his home lab.

Darklight has been working with aseptic medicinal and endangered plant species propagation for over 20 years. Moving into fungal propagation was a natural progression ( or unfortunate side-effect, you choose š . Right now, Darklight is working on long-term archiving of local NNSW fungal species for future remediation and revegetation work- the culture library consists of a fair range of local macrofungi whose ultimate purposes have yet to be revealed to us. But they're here for a reason, and so are we.
What fascinates Darklight is the progression of fungal lab technology towards being more accessible to citizen scientists. Kitchen mycology is easy, safe and productive these days. The teks keep getting better and the outputs more diverse and rewarding.
Our workshop welcomes people at all skills levels. Learn and share.

Jess is a botanical illustrator and tattooer living in Northern Rivers NSW/ Bundjalung country.
A love of the natural world, gardening and science have lead her to ongoing involvement in a citizen mycology project, cactus farming, low harm off-grid living and study of plant tissue culture.