In 1905 she bought Hill Top Farm in the English Lake District. From there she started working with the botanists at Kew Gardens, sharing her theory of fungi reproduction and eventually working on a scientific paper based on it called ‘On the Germination of the Spores of Agaricineae.’ Her scientific illustrations of fungi are still being used today by mycologists Her love for the field grew even further after meeting Charles McIntosh, the naturalist who helped her hone her skills and taught her more about their taxonomy. Beatrix directed her intelligence and artistic talents into her passion for mycology, the study of fungi.