Copelandias are Panaeolus Cyanescens and they are the white anorexic looking ones. They don't do so well outdoors apparently. Coincidentally I got spores of those as a bonus when I got the other spores very recently.
What I am talking about is Psilocybe Cyanescens, the caramel colored wavy cap mushrooms.
They are both contestors for the most potent mushroom, the difference is that the psilocybes are more massive per average specimen even when compared dry. I guess because the Copelandias / Pans reduce to almost nothing and have a freakish potency of something like even 2-3% alkaloid they are said to pack such a huge punch but you can trip as hard or harder off the Psilocybe Cyanescens.
And yes I have experienced them before (they were called Hawaiian mushrooms when they were still legally available here in the Netherlands) and if I remember their appearance I'd say those were Pans.
Unfortunately I can't find my petri dishes so for now there is no myc sectoring isolation and cloning for me, today I initiated liquid cultures that I hope to inoculate substrate with on sunday. My substrate is sawdust and wheat bran. Later I will transfer to corrugated cardboard and mixed-type wood chips.
I could not get vermiculite (it can be ordered for next wednesday but I will be out of town again since I don't live around here), but I think that I can substitute with perlite. When using it as part of the substrate you can't do this but I am only supposed to use it as a casing in the cake-jars.
The Panaeolus is for later because I will do them indoors so it is season independent. However I will station this at my dad's for now, he likes biology and growing things for a hobby/fun as well so I will teach him but I will start with one of the several Cubensis strains I have before moving on to Pans.