Of all the places to put fungus in your body before a show, the ears were far down my list.
Fungi: mycelia, mushrooms & more
This is a community for information and discussions on
- Mycorrhizal networks
- Mycoremediation for land restoration, water mycofiltration etc
- Biodegradable mycelium-based materials (building blocks, textiles, alternatives to plastic, to name a few)
- Fungal technology & biotechnology
- Medicinal uses
And so much more.
Some related local communities
Credits
- Icon: Studio Klarenbeek & Dros
- Banner: Pauline Moss
Hopefully this helps spur the growth of a mycelium industry to replace plastics.
Sounds great, but when plastics first came around as an industry, we didn't know how bad it was.
There's no long term knowledge about fungus stuff once processed into these new forms. It should be better, but there may be issues down the road.
Not saying changing isn't good, it very much is, and it's necessary. Just taking this opportunity to point towards a long human history of great ideas that solve one problem, but cause others.
There's no long term knowledge about fungus stuff once processed into these new forms.
Just to clarify that the fungus stuff is just mycelium. It is a totally natural product that is in this case foam-like. It is not processed, just dried at specific temperatures.
As they mention in this article:
these earplugs are made from Forager’s mycelium foam – and nothing else. This means they can break down in weeks to months,
“GOB’s earplugs are USDA Certified Biobased and entirely made from mycelium, a natural material that breaks down as easily as the produce you eat,”
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But seriously this sounds fantastic. Single use plastics must go.