It's mushroom season in New Hampshire, but the town of Cradensburg is experiencing a bumper-crop of a less desirable mushroom in our town park. Psychedelic mushrooms were discovered early Monday morning by park ranger, Shirley Wellington.
"At first, I thought it was a one-off. I was doing my rounds clearing out the trails from all the roving homeschoolers when I found a bunch of these by Old Makwuk," Wellington said, speaking of the ancient gnarled white pine that residents have come to know and be very frightened of. "I get up over the brush and, sure enough, little brown caps as far as the eye can see."
Park officials are struggling to come up with ways to rid the area of these pesky little fungi and limit visitor's access to them. Volunteers from the local college as well as from the Cranberry Grove Retirement Community have offered to "take the problem off our hands" but meetings to hear out their offerings have broken down into vitriolic and sometimes physical fights. College volunteers have been offered counseling to cope with the emotional anguish of having their rear ends handed to them by septuagenarians, many of them their own grandparents. The town council is considering sanctions against the Cranberry Grove Retirement Community citing, "We can't appear to reward that kind of behavior."
Park officials resigned to shutting down visitor access to the park through early winter, but pavilion renters waged uproarious protest citing inconveniences to "things they might wanna do there."
"We offered them refunds, and access to the park on Farm Hill, but they're threatening to take this all the way up to the Supreme Court," says the Park manager who is currently inquiring with legal council regarding the veracity of this threat.
In the meanwhile, rangers like Wellington have their hands full; both of psychedelic mushrooms, and in chasing down residents who have suddenly taken a liking to a park long held to be on the "bad side of town." The town council has met privately at the park a number of times since Monday morning and have not returned calls for official comment. An anonymous person familiar with the meetings has said that some council members are worried that the entire town could be implicated if feds decide to investigate. Others see the presence of these mushrooms presaging a record tourism season. They predict an excellent recovery from a COVID economy.
One town council member volunteered to speak off the record: "Look, I can't tell if I'm off my tits, on my tits, or if I have tits."
The issue of the psilocybin will no doubt be on the docket for this month's town meeting which, we anticipate, will be much more peaceful than they're usually known to be.