Alan Rockefeller - Mushrooms of Mexico, February 19, 2014
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- Опубліковано 27 сер 2024
- This month Alan Rockefeller was our speaker Presenting the Mushrooms of Mexico 2013, showing the best of 50 gigs of photos taken during this summer's travels. There will be photos of edible, poisonous and hallucinogenic mushrooms, mushroom hunters and fungus fairs from southern Mexico. If you've followed Alan's accounts on the FFSC Google group, you'll surely want to attend this talk.
Alan is a mycologist studying the mushrooms of California and Mexico.H e has been focusing on the taxonomy and photography of Mexican mushrooms for the past seven years. Alan recently returned from five months of collecting in Mexico with extensive field work in the states of Jalisco, Colima, Michoacan, District Federal, Morelos, Puebla, Veracruz and Oaxaca. When he is not photographing mushrooms he is busy sequencing fungal DNA, photographing the microscopic features of mushrooms, hacking computers, modifying electronics and working in the IT Security field
Recorded on behalf of the Santa Cruz Fungus Federation by Justin Pierce
Think I just became the 1,000th sub to y’all! Had to watch more of Alan Rockefeller after seeing his vid with Tony Santoro!
What a knowledgable really cool & humble guy.
Id love to spend a few days walking and learning with him
My eyes get high 🍄 just seeing the fantastic photos Alan has. 👉 Never seen, 👀 other countries, brilliant narrative, thee best! 💙 Thank you!
Wowzers I'm so glad this came in my thread ❤️
Great video, I could listen to Alan all day.
Fantastic video, great pictures. This guy is the MAN on field collection.
It’s Tha Rock in here! 🙌🏼
Glad I found this. I thought it had been deleted.
Wow. He has my dream job
very nice alan, respect
I really like this.
Fantastic photography......I'm thinking if Alan put these photographs into one huge volume I would most certainly purchase a copy. One question, what delineates a Mexican hippie from any other local inhabitant?
Kinda racist
They eat Psilocybes
@@barbarabroeske1061 no it isn't racism. That term gets thrown around too much. By the way this comment is 6 years old. I doubt he cares about your opinion
@@commiecrusher There is a bit of a micro aggression in that comment. You wouldn’t ask that question if it were in the context of the U.S of Europe. It imply’s that said local inhabitants are nothing but zoned out drug users.
I live in Tepoztlán and in the mountains behind my house there’s thousands of shrooms
u r super cool alan
Awesome a new video
Tin foil absorbed light I would suggest white paint or actual reflective material
What marketplaces you talking about?
im interested to know more about the cordyceps expert in mexico you mentioned, if its posible i would like to know his name.
Cool vid. How do all those different psilocybes compare to the common cubensis in potency?
cubensis is relatively weak as psilocybe's go. I don't even think it makes the top 10
thank u
Awesome
Very interesting. Just curios as to why the non psilocybin producing psilocybe genus is still considered a psilocybe. What other characteristics would determine that "psilocybe" label.
Chemical compositions of species aren't that important. They can differ a lot within a given genus. Psilocybe isn't the only genus that produces psilocybin and psilocin either. There are seven more different genera that can have them. Psilocybe was just the first to be studied in detail among psilocybin containing mushrooms.
He said the inactive psilocybe is a close relative of the liberty cap genetically. That is what matters most.
i learn so much of his knowledge about mushrooms in fb until my account was shutdown by my gf.
Awesome dear fb friend
Used eat these in Mexico
is he related to the famous rockefeller family ?
No he is not
It's an alias
why does everyone laughs at amanita rubescens?
Cuz it looks ugly to them i guess. When alan said it tastes good someone in the audience said "you can have them all to yourself" or something like that
$4/lb for morels...That's absurdly cheap.