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This St. Clair College student is growing his passion for mushrooms into a small business

With the help of a provincial student grant, Sami Moussa started his own business growing and selling gourmet mushrooms.

With the help of a provincial grant, Sami Moussa started his own business growing and selling mushrooms

A young man in a grey hoodie standing in front of a black table with mushrooms in bags on it and a small chalkboard sign advertising the product for sale
With the help of a provincial student grant, Moussa started Forest Fungi this summer and has been selling the mushrooms he grows at local farmers markets. (Submitted by Sami Moussa)

Sami Moussa first started foraging for mushrooms with his sister a few years ago.

The two never found many they could eat, but Moussa's interest for the organism stuck. After learning what it would take to grow mushrooms at home, Moussa decided to give it a try.

"I like new challenges," saidMoussa, a medical laboratory sciences student at St. Clair College. "I thought it would be something fun and different and challenging to do."

Now, he's putting his passion to work with the help of a provincial student grant, Moussa started his own business, called Forest Fungi,growing and selling mushrooms this summer.

Moussa, who is from Forest, Ont.,runs a mushroom-growing set up out of his garage complete with tech that manages air flow, light and humidity and sells the final product, as well as DIY mushroom growing kits, at local farmers' markets.

He says the venture has been very successful so far andhe's been selling out regularly at the farmers' markets.

He's also partnered with a cafe to provide the mushrooms they use on their sandwiches.

"I figured I really enjoyed doing it, I had some of the methods down, so why not turn it into a business?" saidMoussa.

A growth of yellow mushrooms grow out of a plastic bag
Sami Moussa grows and sells a variety of edible mushrooms, including lion's mane, shiitake and king oyster mushrooms. (Submitted by Sami Moussa)

Moussa sources the mushroom spores online and grows a variety of types including lion's mane, shiitake, king oyster mushrooms and more.

Moussa started the business as part of the summer company program which provides high school, college and university students with funds and mentorship to help them start their own businesses.

The program aims to teach younger adults about the skills it takes to run a business, like bookkeeping, marketing and sales.

Alison Minato, manager of the Small Business Enterprise Centre for Sarnia-Lambton, which runs the program locally, says it's been great to watch Moussa's business venture succeed this summer.

Who wants to work for a boss when you can be the boss right? ... If I could make an actual business out of this that's kind of the dream.- Sami Moussa, founder of Forest Fungi

"It's really exciting. When I first saw his application, I was like, wow, this is really unique," saidMinato. "It's really nice to be on this little snippet of his career journey so can't wait to see what he does [next]."

The hardest part of the program has been finding a mentor in his line of work but Moussa says he was eventually able to connect with someone who used to grow a few types of mushrooms, which has been helpful when he's run into problems along the way.

Moussa says the startup hasn't been cheap either while the program supplies $1,500 at the beginning of the summer and another $1500 at the end, he's already put the full $3,000 towardthe venture.

A folding table is set up, with a quilt on top of it. The table is displaying a variety of mushrooms and small signs advertizing their prices. A white car is visible in the background
Moussa sells the mushrooms he grows, as well as DIY growing kits, at local farmers markets. (Submitted by Sami Moussa)

While not all of the businesses started through the summer company program end up sticking around into the fall and beyond, Minato says the goal is that young entrepreneurs come away from the experience with more knowledge of what it takes to run a business.

Moussa will be continuing his studies in September but hopes to keep the business up and running and maybe pull in a family member or two to help him sell the produce at the farmer's markets.

He hopes the business might eventually grow into a full-time career.

"Who wants to work for a boss when you can be the boss, right?" Moussa said. "If I could make an actual business out of this that's kind of the dream."

With files by Ankur Gupta