Mushroom Classes & Guided Learning
In-person, online, and field-based options for the Pacific Northwest

Whether you’re picking up a field guide for the first time or refining your eye for tricky look-alikes, there’s a format here that fits. Classes focus on the practical side — what grows where, how to tell species apart, and how to find them in the field.

All instruction is rooted in Pacific Northwest species: the boletes, chanterelles, morels, and others that actually show up in our forests.

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In-Person Classes

Two-hour hands-on sessions covering identification of the most common PNW edibles.

  • Beginner-friendly
  • Physical specimens to handle
  • Q&A throughout
  • Book online, flexible scheduling

See Upcoming Classes

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Online Courses

Self-paced lessons on identification, foraging ecology, and species biology — available anytime.

  • Structured lessons with photos
  • Quizzes and progress tracking
  • Some courses free, others Pro
  • Works on any device

Browse Courses

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Guided Tours

Field forays in the Cascades and surrounding forest — spring through fall, private groups.

  • Spring & fall morel forays
  • Summer chanterelle hunts
  • Private & group options
  • Gift certificates available

Contact

See what’s coming up
Browse the full calendar of upcoming classes, forays, and guided tours.

View Events Calendar →

Apply what you learn — on the map

Forayz overlays burn perimeters, soil moisture, and habitat data so you can scout locations between classes and forays.

Open Forayz Map

What to Expect

In-person classes use actual specimens — not just photos. You’ll handle fresh and dried mushrooms, work through key identification features, and ask questions in real time. Classes run about two hours and are capped to keep them small.

Guided tours vary by season. Spring focuses on morels in burned and riparian zones; summer and fall shift to chanterelles, boletes, and whatever else is fruiting. Tours depart from the Darrington area and other Cascade access points depending on conditions.

Online courses let you go at your own pace. The identification units include high-resolution photos, look-alike comparisons, and habitat notes specific to the PNW.