A first happened in Industry, Maine not long ago: Mark Ancker was buried in a mushroom casket. It was entirely made of mycelium, the intricate root system of fungi. Such caskets take a week to make and are wholly biodegradable, disintegrating in about 45 days. It’s all part of what is called a quiet revolution in burials. Green burials are in demand, and alternatives are being sought. This alternative, the Loop Living Cocoon, is made by a Dutch company Loop Biotech. They’ve done about 2500 such burials in Europe, but the one in rural Maine was the first for the United States. So far, The Green Burial Council has certified about 250 providers and has recorded over 400 green cemeteries over the US and Canada thus highlighting the growing interest in green burials. The emphasis on alternates to traditional burials seeks to be kind to the earth, give back in a way, show that even with our burial we can still contribute to ecology.
Even for those not ready for a mushroom casket, just recognizing the idea as viable is itself a step to finding better ways than what we do at present.
*reprinted from GGID page