Thursday, October 30, 2014

Chanterelle bonanza!


Posted by Joe M.

Thinking that the weekend weather was going to be bad, I decided to take today's afternoon, thursday the 30th, for a little foray of my own. It was a beautifull afternoon. I went on the road to McCall, up to 5,000 feet or close to that. Everything was going according to plan, I was finding small mushrooms. I found a couple fleshy ones, for a change, and when in my hand I realized they were Chanterelles. I thought that the season for them was over, but with this rain they are actively growing right now ( I left many small ones behind). Heads up! Maybe you should check your favorite Chanterelle spot.

 Cantharellus cibarius var. roseocanus

Monday, October 27, 2014

Man-on-a-Horse, or maybe it was a donkey.


Posted by Joe M.

I guess this story is about the pleasure of learning new things, on a field of interest:
About a month ago I found some Tricholoma equestre out of Sage Hen, Idaho. I was happy since it was the first time that I found them, and I little bit sad too because they have been label no longer edible because some poisoning in Europe; see picture:


Tricholoma equestre
 
This weekend I went to a place close to Cascade, Idaho, and found many different species of mushrooms. Towards the end I found these; see picture:
When I saw them I thought "T. equestre" growing on sandy soil; just as the Smith-Weber book said.
I cleaned them, and here they are:
 
Tricholoma leucophyllum
 
I said to myself, eh,  wait a minute the gills and stipe are white instead of yellow...what mushroom is this?...
 
Tricholomas of North America's key points to T. intermedium, sejunctum and arvernense, but also points to Tricholoma leucophyllum on the T.intermedium's description this way: " ...T. intermedium merely represents a variety of T.sejunctum, whereas, according to Michael Beug, Daniel Stunz considered T.leucophyllum to be a variant of  T.equestre, which would lend to support for the existence of two species."
 Smith-Weber's book also refers to collections with white gills as Tricholoma leucopyllum, and since
these mushrooms caps are not particularly fibrillose or have gills with yellow flushes, seems easier to me to think of them as an specie of T. equestre.
A thing woth to mention is the multiple lamellulae (short gills), that make the gills look like they are serrated, and this has confused me in the past with other tricholomas. (Also, the picture seems as if the gills show some yellow on the left, but I can say that is just some defect on the picture itself).
Thanks, I hope this was entertaining. Happy hunting.
 

Monday, October 13, 2014

We're all at the meeting, eating LaReta's caramel corn.  Where are you?


Krista et al

Sunday, August 10, 2014

Posted by Joe M

Alicia, you didn't bring me any mushrooms as you said you would in the previous comment,  but you sent me two pictures of mushrooms that you found at the Upper Payette Lake campground. Really interesting pictures.
I looks to me that the white mushroom is a bolete covered with a parasitic fungi. Probably a Boletus edulis covered with Hypomyces chrysospermus. I am guessing that because the other mushroom looks like a  Boletus edulis. It appears to me that the parasite fungus is starting to take over the reticulation and the pores of the good mushroom; can you see that too? I will discuss it with some people, and I will keep my eyes open when I collect boletes in the future. Thank you!


Early infection
Hypomyces chrysospermus

Thursday, August 7, 2014

Posted by Joe M.

Last Saturday 8/2/14 I got my first russula of the season out of Sage Hen, see picture. I am still uncertain of its classification as a specie, and I only got one, so it is harder to identify. The spore deposit is pale yellow and its taste is mild, that should put it into the R. xerampelina group, with the cap colors not quite right, but the literature says is possible.The cap is large, about 14 cms, stem 4 cms wide, widens down, with a bulb 6 cms wide. The gills are white and very brittle, the edge is not striate, but tinted with a vinaceous color.  It has a strong smell, to me, shrimpy or fishy. The spores are about 9 x 7 microns, with warts about 1 micron. Color changes and bruises to brown.
I guess it could be from the R. fragantissima group, maybe the strong smell is just fetid, I don't have enough experiece to tell the difference. But overall, to me, it fits better on the R. xerempelina description.
I am aware that some of you collect R. xerempelina.  Have you found any to be yellow? Do you have any previous experience with this mushroom in Idaho? What do you think?
Today I found some ferrous sulfate pills, I dissolved them in water, and I am going to find me another russula, and look for the color changes...If it turns green, will it be enough proof?
 

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Boleteless trip.



We went in a little expedition to a location close to Cascade, we being... Dario B. and Joe M.
We thought that Boletus edulis were out in the area. We have heard from some hot-shots that they already got 10, some days ago. We went to my favorite spots there, and found zero. I guess that they know of an earlier blooming location. We found some signs of a start... 2 Suillus lakei, 1 S. brevipes, several Amanita apricas in buton stage...Maybe 2 more weeks? We moved to a diffent area later, and found additional mushrooms. Here are some of our most interesting findings for the day, ( I am posting the smallest size of picture; if you double click on it, it gets larger):






This is the first time I ran into this mushroom. It has taught me the difference between Entoloma, Volvariella and Pluteus. After a while, I think it is  Pluteus cervinus. Edible. I was able to verify it by taking a sample under the microscope and looking for "horned"cystidia, see below.

This Mushroom was about 8 cm. Very heavy. Dario founded on the ground, so we didn't think that it grows on wood. It looks like a Catathelasma but without a veil. Eventually I figured that it was a
Neolentinus ponderosus, with serrated gills. I didn't eat this one, but I will the next one. I heard that are good, have you tried it?


 This one, I am still working on it. I know that it is a Cortinarius, but I can't find a key for 1 stipe with 2 pileus... ;-)

It was a good trip, good company, had fun, learned a lot. The Boletes will be there, maybe next week!

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Blonde Morels




For Joe M. this year's morel hunting success has been only about 10% of last year. By now last year , after getting a good share of Morels, I was getting a decent quantity of King boletes, and I was seen all sorts of Amanitas, Ramarias, Suillus, etc. What is going on? I am a little confused, it looks like, is too early at some places, and too late at others, and I feel like I lost the bus somewhere. Somebody told me that a burned area by GardenValley was really good, but I missed that...Has anybody tried Featherville for morels yet?

Lately I had a little luck with the "Western Blond Mountain Morel" at Sage Hen, Morchella frustrata,  sin: Morchella fallax", but I think that they are done for the year. It showed after the black morel and is much firmer, doesn't crumble as M. snyderi does. M. frustrata is reported from CA and OR, but I am relatively certain of their clasification. Have you collected these before? They cook into a nicely gold color. See pictures:



 

Sunday, April 6, 2014

The morels are out, and they ask me about you.

Hello this is Joe again. A couple of months have passed since my last post, and I still have not found any oyster mushrooms. The ones I posted were from last year, apparently they survived the winter. I thought that oysters would appear before the morels, but I was mistaken. I have not found any new trace of them, but the morels are here. I found some by the Boise river today.
 
Morel (yellow or white?)
 


Last week I have seen some mushrooms for the first time. Can you help me identify these ones below? Are these mushrooms well known and common for you? I specially want to know more about the clitocybe nuda, if that is what they are.

They both have notched gills, and strong micelia threads, early spring...Clitocybes?
                                                                 

 
Clitocybe albirhiza o similar?



                   Above:      White spore print. Cap flat, buff.
                                     Funnel shape, fleshy, stem widends down. Smells ok.




Clitocybe nuda
(can't appreciate the color but is lilac on the gills and stem)
The cap is tan)
.
Below:  Spore print buff-pinkish.Margin incurved. Smells ok.
Do you know this mushroom?
 
 

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Are any fresh Oysters around?


Hello, this is Joe M. trying a new post, as we learned last week. Today I went to the Boise river looking for Oysters (I am trying for 3 weeks now), and I found just a few. So far I only have found brownish ones. I think they are Pleorotus ostreatus, due to their mussel shape, clustered, margin incurved, mild taste, decurring gills... So far I haven't being able to find any light grey, with white gills. So I don't know if I am early or late.The other ones I believe they are "Velvet foot". Here are the pictures.




Pleorotus ostreatus
Flammulina velutipes