Thank you for pointing out the distinction between hallucinogenic and deliriant properties in the Amanita. Really gorgeous selection of mushrooms you were able to find on this tour. Just lovely. Much appreciation.
@BloomingForestDreamsАй бұрын
We have been watching your videos for the last couple years with our son, he will be 3 soon. Now he loves to find mushrooms and check whether they have gills or pores. The other day we were out looking for chanterelles and he exclaimed, mama look! It’s fomitopsis mounceae! I was shocked that he said the whole name and was correct about the mushroom. We’ve learned so much from your channel, thank you!
@martinginsburg7222Ай бұрын
A+ Edits, focus, music, info. Great to see the evolution of your craft to levels that others should take notes
@erics40669 күн бұрын
My ex was from a mushroom harvesting, grading, buying, brokering, and commercially growing family. I loved your presentation and my part time dog even watched attentively when I pointed out your dog. I didn't expect that; rapt focus. Anyway, one thing they taught and hammered into me, "never pull the mushrooms out of the ground, Always cut the base & leave the connection in place." Less dirt in basket. When they were buying, they were fanatics about telling pickers to cut never pull. I enjoyed your video, left a like and subscribed. I live in Grays Harbor, Washington . Eric
@mushroomwonderland16 күн бұрын
@@erics4066 thanks for the kind words. Yeah, when I collect for the basket- whether it be for the dinner table or to sell them, clean mushrooms are the way to go. From the standpoint imif the fungal organism itself, I don't think it makes any difference.🤙🍄
@philabowl8073Ай бұрын
Getting ready to walk out of the door and into the woods, Lane County Oregon. Happy trails!!!🍄🍄🍄
@Dr.Yalex.26 күн бұрын
happy trails to you ! I have property on the north side of the hill , also in Lane County😂… I have mushrooms in my backyard
@lindaw241812 күн бұрын
I really enjoyed this walk in the woods with your best friend and learning about mushrooms 🍄😄
@sarkisdegirmentas75013 күн бұрын
Friend you are living mushroom museum, never seen so many kind in one area, great explanation and the video, Thank you
@jameswatson486511 күн бұрын
Great content and really appreciate your editing efforts!
@farrelltimlake9732Ай бұрын
You had me at "Not the kind you find at a Grateful Dead concert"....
@dirkfrazier977915 күн бұрын
Finally, a dog off-leash in the woods, nice shroom video too- thank you!
@dukeofthedance80628 күн бұрын
Where I live, in early spring the morels are so plentiful that there's enough for everyone in my whole family and circle of friends. Makes me feel blessed and almost kind of magical when finding big patches of them. One second... not there. Next second, whoa, they're all over!
@katiekane52472 күн бұрын
A day in the woods with your dog is a great day, no matter what else you may find.
@DoubleADayАй бұрын
I found about a pound of chanterelles in my front yard yesterday. I left some little ones to hopefully grow a bit larger. I found a few before but this was the biggest flush yet
@josiahbrenemanАй бұрын
lucky!!! I mainly get matsutake as my gourmet mushroom
@Dr.Yalex.26 күн бұрын
lucky indeed! ❤😂
@maryjane-vx4dd8 күн бұрын
This spring I picked my 1st foraged mushrooms. I found about a gallon of morels growing in my garden, coming through cardboard I used for mulch the year before. I pulled out my phone to identify. The poison look alikes wouldn't kill you, so I decided to chance it. Oh my, were they good. Hope they come back next year
@Dr.Yalex.8 күн бұрын
@ they definitely will, especially if you live on the north side of a hill.
@paulsims6888Ай бұрын
It looks like Gunner enjoys the mushroom hunt. Two thumbs up to the videography
@pjn713622 күн бұрын
At 59 and a complete mushroom identification noob I’m not sure how many of these I could find in my home state of Georgia, but I really enjoyed this video, the amount of identification information you provided, and your presentation style.
@mushroomwonderland113 күн бұрын
@@pjn7136 thanks!
@cacogenicist13 күн бұрын
Georgia has interesting mushrooms in the summer, whereas it's very dry on the West Coast in the summer months, so our major flushes are in the fall and spring. You have different species there, but many of the same genera -- morels, chanterelles, Pluerotus "oyster" mushrooms, boletes, etc.
@katiekane52472 күн бұрын
Howdy neighbor, Dawson county here 😎
@lizzucco5455Ай бұрын
Thank you for doing this! I have been out with Lyme disease from riding and foraging in my forests. I can’t ride. I can barely walk but I’m getting better. I miss my mushrooms and I miss the forest. This is such a treat! Btw I ate the reishi mushrooms I had harvested this year ground up in capsules. They kept me from dying until the tick bite showed itself for what it was. Without them I would have probably died. I am on big doxy now second round. This is so nice to watch. ❤ I like the chicken fat mushrooms here in Florida. They are prettier I think. Love those Lactariois deliciouois saffron milk caps. I have them dried and canned, some of my very favorites along with chantries and boletes. They are harder and many who don’t like other mushrooms like them cause they aren’t mushy. 😊
@InconspicuousOwlАй бұрын
Lyme disease was invented by the cia
@geraldasvaitiekus4539Ай бұрын
Hey i hope you're doing well, pardon me for asking but you said the reishi mushrooms kept you from dying? Do you mean you ate them not knowing you had the tick bite but thats what saved you? Also what are the medicinal properties of that mushroom. Sorry for my curiosity im just getting really into mushrooms and your story fascinated me
@ericastier1646Ай бұрын
Having some medical issue made me more compassionate to other people who are suffering from illnesses. I hope your body will get rid of the Lyme and keep it in check. I am relatively new to mushroom foraging and have been worried about ticks. I searched for specific clothing apparel to protect ankles completely and check my pants and arms constantly. I even cut plastic fridge bags and taped them shut around my my ankles to make a slippery and impenetrable barrier. Do you have any advice ? I am considering investing in a jungle forest outfit. But hard to find anything that meets the need.
@wingnutbert968528 күн бұрын
@@ericastier1646 Short of a diving dry suit and scuba helmet, there's not much that's 100%. Long pants and above the calf gators would be reasonable as would long sleeve shirts. If you start with plastic bags and duct tape, your walks are gonna start sucking pretty quick. All ticks do not carry Lime. It's certain types and even then it's only a small percentage of those that actually transmit the decease. A bunch of my family in Nova Scotia have Lime, but they are outdoors farming or in the woods all the time. And some of them don't have much in the way of symptoms or if they do, they come and go. Unfortunately, yes, some people get very bad cases. But I'd not go sealing yourself in plastic. It's just going to make hikes suck. Just check yourself when you get home. Get a good size mirror. And get a Tick Twister. There's other tools, but this specific one is WAY better than any other I've used on myself and my dogs. You can disrobe and shake your cloths off outside if you want an extra step. But enjoy your walks, don't fear them. I've had dozens of ticks and no issues.
@ericastier164628 күн бұрын
@@wingnutbert9685 I certainly appreciated your reply, thank you. Yes i was aware that the freezer bags with bottom cut hole and taped around my ankles and sneakers (over long pants) was only a temporary maximalist solution but i thought better safe than sorry. My disappointment is to find there aren't really any apparels (and i searched jungle specialized stores) to protect against ticks (should i wear rubber high boots). I don't like games of lucks and i bet if you talk to a person with lyme disease you won't care that 20 tick bites will be harmless if 1 will ruin your health. I like your preventive approach. I tend to be constantly aware of avoiding high grass, if i cross a field with grass touchhing the side of my legs i will thoroughly slap and check my legs after. In the forest i am unsure what to avoid for tick exposition. It must still be high green plants. I hate searching myself naked for ticks after a hike. I don't know why, it just feels weird i cannot explain it, i will at most do a quick look and skin search for bumps, certainly not with a magnifier. I must say i use essential oil citronella mixed with water in a dense spray. And that is crucial against mosquitoes. I am sure ticks don't like it either. But incredibly the damn mosquitoes will know which part of your body you spray missed and will sting you there. Forcing you to spray every exposed part including face. Another prevention method is i don't linger at one place for too long when foraging never giving insect more than one chance to sting me. Especially ticks who are ambush predators and need to detect your presence first and are known to try to close the gap plant to plant from several feet before they can bit you. If i do stop to collect a mushroom i will do a visual check for ticks afterwards.
@We_went_camping_againАй бұрын
I am a hunter (deer) and see different kinds of mushrooms but never touch any as I have zero knowledge of mushrooms. That's why I am here on your channel. I'm not sure if you've made one already, but it would be nice to see comparisons or commonly mistaken mushrooms or the look-alikes. Thanks and more power to your channel!
@dianeab105010 күн бұрын
It's a good thing you never touch any of the kids. You're growing as a human.
@Liserhoops27 күн бұрын
I bought a poster of some Fluorescent fungi of North America from Brandy Davies so was impressed when the Dyers Polypore also fluoresced as well . Thank you for pointing that one out to me as well.
@Dr.Yalex.26 күн бұрын
18:39 Wow, I love these - pan fried in butter… But just the caps. Do not use the stems. gently peel off cap skin starting at edge of gills. Skin that does not peel off can stay on, then quarter the cap and fry skin down in butter. Salt pepper to taste - simply delicious
@basil2175Ай бұрын
I love to go walking in the woods and foraging mushrooms and love your channel learning a lot with you thank you
@GuruEthereal369Ай бұрын
Much love from Tarboro. North Carolina 🧡🤙✌️🖖
@knittygirlone3391Ай бұрын
This is my favorite mushroom channel. Love how you take us foraging even if I'm jealous!
@brytonkenney1507Ай бұрын
I love learning a new nickname Beautiful drinking cup awesome thanks again Aaron
@motschenbacherАй бұрын
That wise old Amanita sure was beautiful. Excellent video! Thanks for the education
@dukeofthedance80628 күн бұрын
Hey, fun guy, I'm sick as heck, really really bad, maybe enough to go to the hospital by this weekend if things aren't better but I thoroughly enjoyed this video, it helped pass uncomfortable time (can't stop throwing up, haven't drank booze for 12yrs so it's sure not self inflicted) on a subject that is overwhelmingly fascinating despite having a stomach made of thin paper at the moment. Have thought of taking classes on mycology or the study and growth of certain species for personal consumption. About a half year ago, a professor on that subject from CO University, a good friend, taught me a ton of stuff that helped growing food off the grid including mushrooms as I know some vegetarians (I was one for years and years long ago, always a step away from going back but I need calories and should be eating deep fried sticks of butter every 4hrs being severely underweight - part of why I'm sick so ya, every calorie counts here..) who eat mushrooms with greens, etc. they seem to get by pretty good. Never tried it myself but it's always in back of my mind since they're not hard to grow. Heck, I met a woman and her son who were growing "magic mushrooms", living out of a small RV that was permanently broken down in a grocery store parking lot. She gave them out for free and seemed to have an endless supply. It was pretty neat thing to see. Old hippie lady with her hippie kid, they were very polite and friendly and pretty generous. So if they can do it.. you see my point: anyone can, but I'm talking about non magic kind. In CO the magic ones now legal to grow, eat, and give away for free right now and the last time I was there in July 2024. In 2025 residents in some cities like Denver can buy them from dispensaries or from special "mushroom docs" who make you pay for the appointment, and then give you the mushrooms for free after a "consultation". The more they pay for the appointment, the more mushrooms they give the patient for "free". It's kind of neat how that works out. Just a strange question or maybe not, I'm an underpaid marine biologist (adventurist and survivalist when I'm not) so there are no "weird" or "strange" questions, the only "strange" question is the one not asked, but what if you lived in that area with a great abundance of edible mushrooms, had *_nothing_* else to eat and were hopelessly lost for at least 3-4 weeks, maybe longer? With a fresh water source that's not poisoned, and that aspect out of the way, just eating mushrooms ONLY, how well would that person do? Sorry so long but I really want to know. If a person can live off the land, especially edible mushrooms, that's a skill I'd give almost anything to know, even taking classes for it. Great video.
@Hector-vx5ycАй бұрын
Hi Aaron, thank you so much for sharing your experience and knowledge, sure hope to meeting you sometime!! From Mason county!! Mush love!! 👍🏽💯💯👍🏽
@mountaingirlzstuff431424 күн бұрын
The Shrimp Mushroom is my Favorite, it's got a nice crisp texture and robust flavor.
@brendanquick883426 күн бұрын
Fantastic videos! Your channel inspired us to hit up the Olympic peninsula and I found my first Kind Boletus! Keep up the good work man
@shineyrocks39013 күн бұрын
I had a record haul of lobster mushrooms this year in Oregon. They were thick this year! I picked 30lbs in an hour just on the first day.
@baldknobfarmstead5167Ай бұрын
Oh you Gomphidius! I found a bunch of Shrimp Russula and there were tons of Rosy Gomphidius around with them. I could not find a positive ID in the little pocket book I had so now I know! Not great to nibble on 😜 in my opinion. I thought they were Shrimps at 1st glance 😫 but Milk caps and Russula Brevipes to the rescue for dinner. 😋 Best mushroom channel!
@courtneymcfall8122Ай бұрын
I’m having major envy, hit and dry here in Northern California. Thanks for the steady content!
@goodun2974Ай бұрын
@@courtneymcfall8122 , it's unseasonably warm and approaching drought conditions in Southern New England. I walk our dogs on local trails every day and there are virtually no fresh mushrooms or fungi to be found.
@rk41gator5 күн бұрын
Lovely photography (videography? is that a word?) and fine editing. This is my first visit and I find it visually enjoyable and, of course, entertaining in content.
@jjkairos7317Ай бұрын
I have to beg to differ on your estimation of suillus. I find once dehydrated first their texture improves and they are packed with flavor- almost like a meat bouillon.
@daworldsyuthofdafutureАй бұрын
As Rockefeller says, "a good chef can ..." :) There are so many suillus!
@permafredperma40928 күн бұрын
Bro your videos are amazing thanks for all the info the trail walks are really interesting too thx
@BluDawg23 күн бұрын
Thank You , I appreciate this sooo much 😻
@th829828 күн бұрын
Aaron, I went on my midnight walk last night on my usual trail in Lexington, Washington. As I looked to the side, I spotted clusters of bright yellow mushrooms, some growing separately as well. I shone my UV light on them, and they glowed a vibrant fluorescent green. Naturally, you were the first person I thought of to ask about them. They were growing in tall grass among some dead leaves. What do you think... poisonous?
@SmallMouthNoisesАй бұрын
Diggin the background music! Quite whimsical
@allencolvin43209 күн бұрын
Great video! Soooooo....in one of the mushroom groups I am in on FB, there are 2 or 3 people there who insist that the Jack o lantern mushrooms do not grow in western Washington. I have seen them, and still, I am told that whatever I did see was something else....others are saying that Northern California is as far north as they get in the PNW. Out of genuine inquiry, do we have those here? Thanks
@matthewquintanilla8011Ай бұрын
Hey, I want to start off by saying thank you for sharing so much knowledge with us. One can watch your videos and truly admire the passion you have for the evergrowing subject of mushrooms. As an amateur forager, I had a request: would you be able to share weather conditions whenever you can? I know that mushrooms love moisture, especially after rain, but I also wonder if there are soil and air temperatures that are optimal for a search. I know that these details can be acquired if I search through some literature, but I appreciate perhaps seeing it in action as you find them. Again, thank you for everything you do!
@mushroomwonderland1Ай бұрын
@@matthewquintanilla8011 Is that something to consider but adds another layer of considerations and workload but I will definitely put some thought into how I might be able to do that in a cohesive way. Perhaps if I'm shooting all in the same forest I can put the date and temperature and elevation at the beginning of the video or something. Thanks for the input and for watching!
@matthewquintanilla8011Ай бұрын
@@mushroomwonderland1No worries, I understand. The quality of your videos is great as it is, your effort doesn't go in vain!
@PamelaZiemann28 күн бұрын
More foraging, less fighting. Thanks for this great video
@PlutoCoffinsАй бұрын
I've found turkey tail (naturally) chicken of the woods (too dry to be eaten unfortunately) amanita Muscaria (also too dry) lions maine (too dry 😢) and giant puffball mushrooms. Turned the turkey tail into a tea, and the giant puffball fried up, both for my dog.
@christopherkindred375825 күн бұрын
I am interested to hear about the nutritional value of some of the mushrooms you find. You use the expression “edible but forgettable” when describing some. It’d be good to know, since they are forgettable, if they are at least nutritious. Thank you for this video. I’m loving it so far!
@wingnutbert968528 күн бұрын
After watching your candy cap vid from a while ago, I grabbed some of what I thought were candy caps, dried them, and they didn't smell like anything. I checked with a mycologist at the local mycology show that happened to be last weekend here, and he said they aren't found here on Van. Island. So, while disappointing, also good to know I can tick that off my list of edibles to look for. So thanks for the inspiration to try that shroom. I'm going to try a shrimp Russala next. Just looking to add a couple more easy I.D. edibles to look for. Especially when Chant's, Hedge's and Matsu's are having a slim year. Thanks again!!!! Some of the best shroom vids for sure!
@IngridGowdy5 күн бұрын
Wonderful program . Unfortunately I live on the Eastcoast . Different mushrooms growing here and I'm afraid to eat most of them . Haven't met any expert near me . There are some in Nort Jersey, too far away from me
@justa.american83038 күн бұрын
How can I identify a mushroom called 'Tree Ears'? It is a culinary mushroom used in asian cooking. I bought some at a grocery store and used it in Hot 'n Sour soup.
@KokoraLife22 күн бұрын
It's so beautiful there!
@StanislavSykora-ij1iuАй бұрын
This mushroom (fly Agaric)is only mildly poisonous. It is used to make a tincture. Very good for poultices on sore joints and muscles.
@vickivanslyke1090Ай бұрын
Really good episode! Thanks!
@HansQuistorff24 күн бұрын
Thank you! I live on the Kry Peninsula
@wuznotbornyesterda19 күн бұрын
We have had drought conditions in Southern Indiana for the past 2 summers and the huge chanterelles patch never fruited either year. Barely had a few morels this spring on our other property. Then we had a rain a few weeks ago and I had gobs of puffballs. Too many to eat so I dehydrated a bunch. The deer ate some and then they were gone. Back to dry again.
@jessiefair73914 күн бұрын
Really cool video
@David_Griggs11 күн бұрын
I haven't been to mushroom wonderland since college back in the '90's
@NemraiАй бұрын
It's probably my last mushroom hunt of the year tomorrow, it's been a long season, but is coming to an end where I live in Norway now. I don't like yellowfoots so much even if they'll grow for a while longer. So I hope that I find some chanterelles or hedgehog mushrooms. At least I'll have this channel to watch through the winter and such :)
@whoe_whate8487Ай бұрын
Hey Aaron, it’s Sean from KPMS. I haven’t been able to go foraging for a while… I feel like im missing out on this mushroom season! Those Violet Corts really are some awesome photography subjects. Definitely on my bucketlist next time I’m out there.
@mushroomwonderland1Ай бұрын
@@whoe_whate8487 whereabouts do you live? Maybe I'll take you out sometime and we can go mushrooming.
@cashnnoncrypto8215Ай бұрын
Love your videos. I would love see u do a Mushroom hunt in Texas. We have some edibles. Most of the Mushrooms are hard to identify and difficult to reference. I would love to see an expert foraging in my area
@dianeab105010 күн бұрын
Excellent.
@Taz24721 күн бұрын
Aminita muscaria is an wonderful mushroom 🍄 if you know how to prepare it and consume it. It has some wonderful pain relief properties and if you brew a tea of it before going to sleep your sleep will be better than ever and you wake up really rested. I do not recommend this for anyone to try but fly agaric 🍄 is an interesting mushroom
@AetherPavilionАй бұрын
Very nice video. Familiar ecosystem as I live across the strait over on Vancouver Island. I’ve spent many autumns foraging in forests just like that. Have you trained your dog to hunt for your favourite mushroom species? I hear labradors are exceptionally good at that task.
@mushroomwonderland1Ай бұрын
@@AetherPavilion not him, but we have a younger GSP who is trained to find culinary truffles!
@mwirth187Ай бұрын
So far a great season here in Germany. Already have enough saphron milk caps that im salting them. Cheers!
@ld8516Ай бұрын
***Awesome video, thank you brother of forage***
@deannamadrigal750324 күн бұрын
Love the music 🎶 🎵
@learningtobeme51955 күн бұрын
I like to keep a few little berry containers in my basket for keeping fragile mushies from getting mushed.
@billt611611 күн бұрын
The neighbors had a nice patch of Shaggy Manes in their driveway. How do you ask if you can pick your neighbors mushrooms, without sounding crazy?
@Dr.Yalex.26 күн бұрын
12:34 chicken fats/ butter mushrooms pickle/marinate extremely well❤. Especially the little ones - pickled whole. 😋 Many recipes on KZbin, unfortunately only in Russian , do copy and paste “маринованные маслята”
@jokeogh9939Ай бұрын
Where I live in the UK I rarely find choice edible mushrooms but at the the moment there are lots of beautiful dark purple, lilac, red and yellow russullas around. I have to politely disagree with you that they are boring. 😂
@petertuckergoettler572015 күн бұрын
Interesting To Note, merci. Mushroom Minds.
@janicesnell6507 күн бұрын
My understanding is that we should never pick/pull the mushrooms 'roots' up; but cut them above ground so we do NOT disturb the mitochondria that keeps the mushrooms growing which is underground.
@mushroomwonderland16 күн бұрын
@@janicesnell650 it makes no difference to the Mycelium whether cut or plucked. Plenty of studies that prove it makes no difference. That line of thinking is from people who are mistaking fungus for plant biology, quite different indeed.
@Ethan-mn9jh10 күн бұрын
Niiice!! Thank You Man.
@MadelineRose-ep7fj13 күн бұрын
Love this video. Live on Whidbey, but most favorite stomping grounds is the peninsula. 😊
@jasonplant5432Ай бұрын
I have all kinds of mushrooms growing on the property here in the kiamichi. I do believe I have a healthy patch of Cinnabon chantrels. To chicken to try them but identification is difficult from the jack o lantern .
@daworldsyuthofdafutureАй бұрын
Cinnabon chanties! Do you have a franchise?:) Jack o laterns glow in the dark... grow on wood(can be wood underground, careful), have real gills versus false You could bring a couple inside to dry on a sunny sill. once dried you will know if a chantie, imho. Then you can know next year. Here's a fun superconservative shroomer rule: 1st year observe, 2nd, pick, 3rd, try 4th, share. fun!
@georgehartler34239 күн бұрын
Sorry about this but one more many decades back down in Louisiana the ones that were kind of purpley growing out of the c o w crap would make for a fun times. Sometimes they grew on horse poop play I can't remember which ones were better
@Dr.Yalex.26 күн бұрын
26:43 Russulaleses… in Russian, the common name for these mushrooms is “raw edible” (siro-ezhka) сыроежка. being the most numerous mushroom, no wonder it can be eaten raw by humans without developing health/digestive issues
@rk41gator5 күн бұрын
Where do you find your music? Nice, interesting, and atmospheric.
@violettracey29 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@KamielDV215 күн бұрын
Amanitas are tasty as heck, also muscimol is a fun side effect
@KamielDV215 күн бұрын
But yeah don't just mess around with it if you do not know what you are doing. Ibotanic acid can really mess you up, I have consumed one raw for the science of it and felt rather poisoned.
@alexis1156Ай бұрын
Is armillaria that grows in association with conifers just as edible as the ones that grow on deciduous trees?
@mushroomwonderland1Ай бұрын
@@alexis1156 yes.
@alexis1156Ай бұрын
@@mushroomwonderland1 thanks
@daworldsyuthofdafutureАй бұрын
@@alexis1156 "just as edible':)
@dougalexander72047 күн бұрын
So you collect Amanita muscaria in the fall? Is it specific to any certain trees.
@sasha1316 күн бұрын
Tnx a lot !!!
@lauraallen476916 күн бұрын
What elevation are you at on your trail?
@topfeedcocoАй бұрын
@9:45 I was just about to say petroleum can cause that. I used Vaseline to seal my pressure cooker back in the day and somehow contaminated a bag of oysters that were pinning and they got all kinds of rosecomb weirded out on that side.
@alexis1156Ай бұрын
Another question, is parboiling for armillaria absolutely required? Or is it just necessary to cook them well? I heard that par boiling significantly reduces the flavor
@jackstrange6360Ай бұрын
As a beginner mushroom enthusiast who has just found, harvested, and eaten his first CoW, what accessories would you suggest when hunting mushrooms. You’ve talked about the basket before, but is there a style/type of knife that is best? Anything I’m missing?
@mwirth187Ай бұрын
Lots of folks use the opinel foraging knife
@mushroomwonderland1Ай бұрын
@@jackstrange6360 I have a link to a good foraging knife and a mesh bag in the comments. A nice basket works even better.
@martinginsburg7222Ай бұрын
you have knifes in your pantry. Every extra purchase of so-called customized equipment is just another contribution to more CO2/global warming
@daworldsyuthofdafutureАй бұрын
As a heads up, if you get into it you will quickly need more than a basket:)! Serious foragers carry multiple 'baskets' ( or containers). The mesh bag is an option. Getting back home with dozens or hundreds of pounds of fragile foreststuffs from tangled woods can be an adventure:)!
@Adroit-de2zh22 күн бұрын
16:31 Couldn't hold back the intrusive thoughts to taste that milky mushroom whose edibility is unknown
@cacogenicist13 күн бұрын
Rosecomb occurs in cultivation -- particularly common with _Ps. cubensis_ ... so hypotheses as to its cause should account for that fact. I think it's some sort of disruption of the electrical signaling involved with fruit body morphology development.
@black_eagleАй бұрын
Nice video. For a beginner what resources do you recommend for learning to ID mushrooms (besides watching your channel of course)? Are there any books, forums or apps you recommend? I live in the northern Peninsula. Thanks.
@jonathanmoynihan3661Ай бұрын
Lobster Mushrooms going off this year on the olympic peninsula
@MrTTF420Ай бұрын
The background audio is very nice.
@jorgegonzalez-larramendi54919 күн бұрын
Nice trails! btw indeed, my mushroom app is ok maybe 15% of the time -- clueless 😅
@kimberlycoolidge52069 күн бұрын
I love where I was born... I ❤️ PNW
@goodun2974Ай бұрын
Can you make dye with purple Cortinarius?
@mushroomwonderland1Ай бұрын
@@goodun2974 people are trying but it really hasn't been done yet, which is a shame because it's so beautiful.
@karenbergmann209Ай бұрын
I’m so jealous of people finding Amanita Muscaria!!! We don’t get them where I live.
@daworldsyuthofdafutureАй бұрын
Wow! where do you live? Are you sure you do not have non-red ones? Cheers:)
@karenbergmann209Ай бұрын
@@daworldsyuthofdafuture I’m in southern Ontario , Canada. We do have the yellow Amanita but not the red
@kendradunnington576616 күн бұрын
Any suggestions on where to look for Chanterelles near Winlock, Chehealis area?
@stevenS19738 күн бұрын
I work at Gig Harbor high school and live in Long branch. Could we possibly set up a time for a mushroom hike locally or could you let me know where our schedule exists that I could come along for one of your existing hikes? Thanks for the help.
@mushroomwonderland18 күн бұрын
@@stevenS1973 Yeah you can check out the description of the video for a link or just go to www.mushroom-wonderland.com and look for foray tours. They're pretty much filled up for the season, but I will open a few more for spring.
@danielwhitehouse76828 күн бұрын
Would love to see a new England thing and include the lady slippers
@NayanBeardy16 күн бұрын
I'm finding plenty of Russula cerolens around the portland area this November, i was hoping they were edible when i first found them, but they're unpleasant to toxic.
@Food.Adventure.12 күн бұрын
I’m gonna taste this lactation. (Falls over dead immediately) lol 😂 😅
@cynthiamason40697 күн бұрын
How many of these mushrooms are eaten by wildlife?
@saolao4ever93319 күн бұрын
Do I need a permit for mushroom foraging ?
@prissy3112 күн бұрын
It's funny how you don't seem to like a lot of the edible mushrooms you showed us. You present it more like a specimen rather than as an informed mushroom forager for food. I subscribed because you at least show which ones are edible and which ones are toxic.
@venomoussilverback27 күн бұрын
We get amanita persinia here in The southeast
@hannahriv5169Ай бұрын
My younger brother found a puffball mushroom today without realizing and he and his friend thought it was poison. I told him what it was and he was regretful 😂