PNW mushrooms
Moderators: rjlittlefield, ChrisR, Chris S., Pau
PNW mushrooms
My son has recently become a mushroom fan. He has identified about 4 edible species in my trees. best is the white truffles, but they are not very photogenic. Some others are fairly interesting. Here is one.
5DIII, EF100 f/2.8L, natural light, normal post processing.
5DIII, EF100 f/2.8L, natural light, normal post processing.
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Thought so! Those speckles (lack of a technical term) are a dead give-away. My initial thought was "Wait why isn't it red? Deceiving me?".Pau wrote:To me it looks like Amanita muscaria which is very toxic, although typically red colored there are also yellow and brown varieties.
I've only seen red ones myself, truly beautiful mushrooms. I just saw some yellow ones on google, wow they look majestic and tasty. I'd eat one... in farming themed video games.
I added the word brown after the name you provided, this popped up: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanita_regalis
Putting yellow gives the same name, linking to a wikipedia page that also features the yellow variant.
Last edited by Macro_Cosmos on Thu Apr 02, 2020 5:55 am, edited 1 time in total.
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In Sweden, I would have called it Amanita regalis. But that seems restricted to Alaska in America, so it's likely another related species.
Edit:
Here's a key:
http://www.svims.ca/council/Amanit.htm
Edit:
Here's a key:
http://www.svims.ca/council/Amanit.htm
Amanita phalloides is very toxic.Pau wrote:To me it looks like Amanita muscaria which is very toxic, although typically red colored there are also yellow and brown varieties.
Amanita muscaria is not.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanita_muscaria
Properly prepared is used for food (especially in nothern EU) for centuries. You, most probably, should eat them few buckets in order to be sick ...
Dbur's mushroom looks like Amanita rubescens
Last edited by Saul on Thu Apr 02, 2020 8:53 am, edited 1 time in total.
Saul
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μ-stuff
Yes, I did consult the Wiki... and what I read just confirms what I wrote: "very toxic"-- not something like "often mortal".Saul wrote:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanita_muscaria
Properly prepared is used for food (especially in nothern EU) for centuries...
Many toxic species (some very important like cassava) become edible when detoxified with the adequate treatment ... just because they are toxic
Pau
I'm still alive ...Pau wrote:Yes, I did consult the Wiki... and what I read just confirms what I wrote: "very toxic"-- not something like "often mortal".Saul wrote:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanita_muscaria
Properly prepared is used for food (especially in nothern EU) for centuries...
Many toxic species (some very important like cassava) become edible when detoxified with the adequate treatment ... just because they are toxic
Saul
μ-stuff
μ-stuff
Ha ha, unless I'm micro/macro maniac zombie already !Pau wrote:Are you sure?Saul wrote:...
I'm still alive ...
If honestly, using as a medicine, it help me to get rid of pills, which I had to use because of my medical problems. Do not offer make salads from them ... Especially when there are a lot of really poisonous relatives, which look very similar. Sometimes even professional mushroom pickers are making mistakes - all mushrooms are eatable, but some of them - one time only ....
Saul
μ-stuff
μ-stuff
My son tells me from his mushroom studies that these were used by some nomadic Russian tribes to have group hallucinations whenever they met together. Apparently the hallucinations from this one are not particularly pleasant. They also fed it to their reindeer and then drank the reindeer urine. Must be true if it's on the internet.
I am the son who finds the mushrooms. We do not have A. regalis in yamhill/tillamook region of Oregon as far as I know. The woods are mixed - primarily conifer dominated by doug fir (but many other species as well) with some maple/oaks interspersed. Another suggestion has been A. rubescens which is extremely rare here - but either way there is no red blushing on bruising the flesh. I also am leaning on A. pantherina which fruits here in the spring and not A. muscaria which is a summer/fall mushroom. I've run through a number of PNW amanita keys but there is no way to be sure. I started a spore print but when I came back (12 hr) the mushroom was decomposed and there were 100's of fly larvae. I might try another but I have no intention of consuming said mushrooms so I may pass. I am considering destroying them all because I do not want competition with the also mycorrhizal white truffles.
This is Amanita pantherina commonly known as the Panther Cap but it isn’t that common, it’s found in parts of the USA and Europe. Like Amanita muscaria (The Fly Agaric), it contains the psychoactive toxins ibotenic acid and muscimol as well as muscazone and muscarine so is known as poisonous. The toxins are destroyed by lots of heat so some brave people boil them to destruction and eat soggy mess that’s left, others (even braver) eat small amounts raw and “see things”.
Destroying the sporocarps of this fungi will not have any affect whatsoever on the truffles in the area.
Destroying the sporocarps of this fungi will not have any affect whatsoever on the truffles in the area.