Puerto Rico Foray 2025 - Hongos en la Isla del Encanto
- Dec 16, 2025
- 6 min read
Good afternoon, friends,
Late Sunday night I returned from our first Puerto Rico Mushroom Foray. I cohosted the trip with Kurt Miller, a local mycologist, and my friends at Catskill Fungi. This foray recreated a trip I did with Kurt, Gabriela, and John, back in 2022, but this time we expanded the itinerary and brought a group along with us. We had a core group of fourteen with us over the eight days, and we were fortunate to be joined by a handful of folks from the island for a couple days here and there.
Heading into the trip I was a touch apprehensive about how the group dynamics would unfold, but the group exceeded all my expectations. Some of the participants I knew going in, and some I met for the first time. We even had one of my old coworkers from Central Park join us, which meant a lot to me — shoutout to Harry. Each person was open-minded, thoughtful, and happy to go with the flow. A very easy to group to travel with and learn with, and the bond we developed felt familial by the end of it. Someone even laughed so hard they peed their pants.

The Route
We spent the first three nights in San Juan. That included a trip to Old San Juan where we found flamingo chanterelles growing right at the base of El Morro, the 16th-century Spanish fort, and UNESCO World Heritage site; a visit to Max at Wild Culture Mushrooms where we learned about mushroom cultivation on the island; a tostones cooking workshop led by Kurt’s wife, Yaritza; and a day trip out to El Yunque where we mushroomed and swam in waterfalls.
We left San Juan and headed toward Patillas on the southern part of the island. We spent the next two nights at Eye on the Rainforest, a thousand-acre tract of forest that’s devoted to Puerto Rican plant conservation and sustainable forestry. We met Thrity (3T), the steward of the land and all-around force of nature, who has been there since the turn of the century. She shared with us the history of Puerto Rican hardwood tree conservation as well as the hardships and setbacks Eye on the Rainforest (and the whole island) suffered after Hurricane Maria in 2017.
She did put a call out for volunteers, and it’s a shame we weren’t there for more time to help out, but if you’re interested you can stay at the preserve and volunteer a few hours a day to plant, weed, maintain trails, or do general cleanup for a mere $25/night to cover room and board. I will be back.

The last leg of our trip was in Rincón, a surf town on the west coast. We got to look for mushrooms around Domes, a decommissioned nuclear power plant that now serves as a backdrop for some of the best surf on the island. We also got a geology lesson from a local geologist surfer, Mike, and got to eat fresh fruit and process Aloe with Amy on her land that also serves as an outdoor classroom.
It’s impossible to compress the whole trip into a few paragraphs, but I took a lot of pictures of the fungi we saw, so if a picture is worth a thousand words then hopefully the mushrooms can convey the message. There were points at which the large, gilled mushrooms were a bit elusive — particularly in El Yunque — but there were more than enough at each stop throughout the trip. Selecting a few from each location was difficult, but without further ado, the mushrooms of our 2025 Puerto Rico Foray:
El Yunque Mushrooms
Big Laughing Gym (Gymnopilus imperialis)

Mycena section Exornatae

Hygrocybe occidentalis

Ergot (Claviceps paspali)
This pathogenic fungus infects wild grasses and can be used to create the psychedelic substance LSD. The fruiting body grows from a sclerotium (a dense ball the fungus creates to store nutrients) shown in the photo on the right.
Eye on the Rainforest Mushrooms
Rainforest Horsehair Marasmius (Marasmius crinis-equi)
This fungus has airborne mycelium, the texture of horsehair, and is a parasite on plants. The picture on the right shows a bird used this aerial mycelium as nesting material. One of my favorite finds from the whole trip.
Talaromyces palmae

Tropical Chicken of the Woods? (Kusaghiporia talpae)

Rincón Mushrooms
Stinky Sphere (Clathrus crispa)

Trogia cantharelloides

Tropical Woodear (Auricularia brasiliensis)

Last Mushroom Found:
Before we went to the airport, we did a little scouting for our next Puerto Rico Foray (mark your calendars for January 2027). It had rained the past two days in San Juan, and Kurt wanted to find some Amanitas that grow with the seagrapes (Coccoloba uvifera) and are particularly responsive to rain. We found both the species we were looking for, and one that had a particularly nice spot on a limestone cliff overlooking the ocean.
Beach-loving Ringless Amanita (Amanita arenicola)

The Non-Fungal Interactions
On our drive from Rincón back to San Juan, we met Veronica with Coco Conservacion Costera. She hiked us out to one of Puerto Rico’s three train tunnels, built in the middle of the twentieth century. No longer operational, it now mimics a cave environment and is inhabited by bats and the Guabá.
The Guabá is a whip spider (Phrynus longipes) that lives in the cutout in the middle of the tunnel that served as a refuge for people caught in the tunnel when a train was coming. Like Shelob in her lair, Veronica told us that she lives in the cutout and would be there when we got to the middle of the tunnel. We trepidatiously walked into the darkness and when we shined our lights into the cutout, lo and behold there she was.

Star Jelly (Nostoc commune)

Tree Millipede (Anadenobolus arboreus)

This trip was special. I can’t reiterate enough how much the group rocked. Time felt suspended. A lot of trips I’m pretty cognizant of what day it is, what the plan is for the day, and when I’m going home, but that was not the case this past week. Now, that may not be exactly what you want to hear from one of the facilitators, one of the people in charge of making sure we got to where we were going on time and in one piece, but it truly was totally tranquilo. Everyone took a chance on us leading our first foray, stepped out of their own comfort zones, and it made for not just a memorable experience, but a spiritual one.
Reacclimatizing has definitely been a transition. I was swimming in the ocean on Sunday and then shoveling snow on Monday. Now I’m watching Bad Bunny music videos and reminiscing on what was. Benito said it best when he said, “No me quiero ir de aqui” or “I don’t want to leave here”.
Mushroom Events this week with the Upper Cape Naturalist Club
Thursday, December 18th, 6:00-7:30 pm: Winter Fungi Talk at Bourne Library
Saturday, December 20th, 10 am-noon: Winter Fungi Walk at Breivogel Ponds Conservation Area, Falmouth
The winter solstice is on Sunday. Longer days are on the horizon,
Aubrey








