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mushrooms (fungi/mycelium) can clean up just about any human created mess. a strain has even been found to eat plastic. here's a story about them being used in the sanfran mess:



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A group of guerrilla volunteers is cleaning oil from San Francisco's beaches using an unorthodox, albeit totally organic, method: human hair and mushrooms.

Using mats made of hair, they are absorbing the droplets of oil that have washed ashore since a cargo ship rammed the base of a Bay Bridge tower last week, spilling 58,000 gallons of fuel.

Hair, which naturally absorbs oil from air and water, acts as a perfect sponge, said Lisa Gautier of San Francisco, who provided 1,000 hair mats. They are about the size of a doormat, tightly woven with dark hair, and feel somewhat like an S.O.S pad.

While the mats may not be the obvious choice among hazardous waste experts, they hit San Francisco's green chord: More than 700 volunteers have tried them in recent days. Organizers hope their success will inspire more ecological responses to toxic waste removal.



Gautier had 1,000 of them on hand because she runs a nonprofit, Matter of Trust, which matches donations from businesses with needy nonprofits. She collects human hair from Bay Area salons and sends it to Georgia to be woven into mats, which she then gives to the San Francisco Department of the Environment to absorb used motor oil.

Once the mats are soaked with black gunk, oyster mushrooms will take over, growing on the mats and absorbing the oil.

National mushroom expert Paul Stamets was in town the weekend after the spill for the Green Festival, heard of Gautier's work and donated $10,000 worth of oyster mushrooms to harvest on the oily hair mats.

Gautier said the mushrooms will absorb the oil within 12 weeks, Gautier said, turning the hair mats into nontoxic compost.

"You make it like a lasagna," Gautier said. "You layer the oily hair mats with mushrooms and straw, turn it in six weeks, and by 12 weeks you have good soil."

The soil may not be good enough to grow carrots but is certainly good enough to use for landscaping along roads, she said.

The Environmental Protection Agency caught wind of the hair brigade and is giving the volunteers four-hour classes to certify them to clean up oil, Gautier said.

Cole Hardware provided discount white Tyvex protection suits, and city workers from the Department of the Environment pitched in the 800 hair mats they had on hand.

On Tuesday, volunteers used the mats and white plastic forks to gingerly lift tiny oil blobs from the sand at Ocean Beach.

"It's interesting how when we are challenged, we become more inventive," said volunteer David Hirtz, who lives nearby and is a member of the Neighborhood Emergency Response Team run through the San Francisco Fire Department.

"Instead of yelling and complaining and blaming, you are doing something about it," he said.

By Tuesday afternoon, piles of garbage bags full of the used hair mats were sitting on Ocean Beach. Gautier says they will be placed in bins until she can locate a place to make one huge pile and sprinkle in the mushrooms. She's tried to contact people from the O'Brien's Group, hired by the ship owner to do cleanup with skimmers, to ask them to take the pile, but so far hasn't gotten a response.

The Coast Guard, which in the first days after the spill turned hundreds of volunteers away from the beaches due to safety concerns, was not delighted when informed of the latest eco-volunteer effort.

"I live in San Francisco, too, and I understand wanting to clean the beach in a way that's good for the environment, but this stuff is toxic, and people who are not trained shouldn't touch it," said Coast Guard Petty Officer Mariana O'Leary.

Gautier said nearly all the people using hair mats have since been trained. Even so, she ran out of hair mats Tuesday.

She's been talking with a company in China that makes industrial-sized hair mats about getting more shipped to San Francisco. Gautier said she can even have large sea booms made by stuffing hair into nylon stockings.

"This can completely revolutionize oil spill cleanup," she said, reaching down with a mat to soak up a glob on Ocean Beach.

Two barefoot joggers passed by.

"That's amazing," Gautier said. "Haven't they heard it's dangerous out here?"

Online resources
To donate hair:

www.matteroftrust.org/programs/hairmatsinfo.html

YouTube video of volunteers using hair mats:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=WscZJ2Dh0RY

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/11/14/MNPQTBLE4.DTL
Hair mats and mushrooms help to clean San Francisco oil spill.

Date: 2007-11-17 12:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jehannamama.livejournal.com
Wow this is very cool! If you don't mind, since it isn't f-lock'ed, I'd like to link back to this entry.

Date: 2007-11-17 01:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lahermite.livejournal.com
i stole it from the natural living forum so link away!

Date: 2007-11-17 01:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hippiedork.livejournal.com
That is so cool!!!

Date: 2007-11-17 01:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] asharak.livejournal.com
Very cool.

Oil is the dinosaurs' revenge when you think about it.

hehe.

Date: 2007-11-17 02:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lahermite.livejournal.com
except i'm pretty sure oil is trees, not dinosaurs. but i get ya!

Date: 2007-11-17 01:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] 24hourmama.livejournal.com
Thank you. I needed something like this.

Date: 2007-11-17 06:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] greencow.livejournal.com
this is way cool!

i cross the golden gate every day, and since the spill, i see the oil slicks in the bay...it's very depressing...and i'm very happy to hear someone is doing something eco-friendly to help with the cleanup.

Date: 2007-11-17 01:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lahermite.livejournal.com
generally speaking, mycellium and permaculture experts show up at all the ecological disasters. it's what they do. do you remember reading about starhawk going to new orleans? same thing. of course, band-aids wouldn't be needed if the messes weren't created in the first place...

Date: 2007-11-17 07:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] greencow.livejournal.com
yes. i remember that. most people don't know about the eco-friendly rescue efforts.

Date: 2007-11-17 07:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lahermite.livejournal.com
no profit in it.

Date: 2007-11-18 12:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] teysah.livejournal.com
awesome- i had heard that paul was going to get involved in the spill and was excited to see what he did. he's pretty amazing:)

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