What's new
  • Happy Birthday ICMag! Been 20 years since Gypsy Nirvana created the forum! We are celebrating with a 4/20 Giveaway and by launching a new Patreon tier called "420club". You can read more here.
  • Important notice: ICMag's T.O.U. has been updated. Please review it here. For your convenience, it is also available in the main forum menu, under 'Quick Links"!

Edible Mushroom Hunters/Gatherers...

DIDM

Malaika
Veteran
go to Olympia WA, wait for it to rain for a few days in a row, then when the forecast is for sun get up early, and follow all the hippies to the city parks under the big trees, the bark mulch contains spores that city works, for years and years, have added to the bark mulch, which grow into cyanesence mushrooms

they are rampant, just follow the hippies on an early sunny morning, there are tons right across the street from the cop shop,only thing is,put them in a basket or hat, collecting in a bag is illegal

Evergreen State's mycology kids are awesome
 
P

PermaBuzz

finally found some morels but it took alot of bushwacking.
yeah they are elusive but there is a knack to it.
Not finding them in mature climax type forests.
Instead I'm finding that very overgrown disturbed in the past younger forests
are better. Lotta competition too in oakland county - gotta head upnorth.
Looking forward to the summer shrooms like chickebn of the woods and black trumps.
 
C

Cep

go to Olympia WA, wait for it to rain for a few days in a row, then when the forecast is for sun get up early, and follow all the hippies to the city parks under the big trees, the bark mulch contains spores that city works, for years and years, have added to the bark mulch, which grow into cyanesence mushrooms

they are rampant, just follow the hippies on an early sunny morning, there are tons right across the street from the cop shop,only thing is,put them in a basket or hat, collecting in a bag is illegal

Evergreen State's mycology kids are awesome

Yes, I suppose those are "edible" mushrooms :bigeye:

They can also be found on the coast in blackberry brambles, wood chip piles, tall grass if you don't want to pick next to the cop shop. Also gather other non active species into whatever your container is and carry around a syllabus for a mycology course as this allows a plea of ignorance to authorities.

finally found some morels but it took alot of bushwacking.
yeah they are elusive but there is a knack to it.
Not finding them in mature climax type forests.
Instead I'm finding that very overgrown disturbed in the past younger forests
are better. Lotta competition too in oakland county - gotta head upnorth.
Looking forward to the summer shrooms like chickebn of the woods and black trumps.

Where is this climax forest you speak of? :biggrin:
 
P

PermaBuzz

Where is this climax forest you speak of? :biggrin:

Its not climax as in unlogged old growth. About the best "old growth" youre gonna find in SE mich. is some remnant mature secondary growth. Quite large hardwoods, diverse understory, not too much invasives - usually never farmed due to hills or rocky/swampy soil - comes pretty close to old growth and is where I find alot of choice shrooms - but not so for morels, they seem to like disturbed areas.
 

DIDM

Malaika
Veteran
if ya want to check out mushroom mecca check out Opal Creek in Oregon

some of the last untouched land in the lower 48, amazing it is

6543618.jpg
 
C

Cep

DIDM, I can't see your pics is it because I'm using a proxy?

Joly, that particular mushroom in my experience hasn't been worth the time it takes to pick them. I've tried it about 4 times, prepared differently and with young specimens and it just simply tastes bad. Like, objectively bad.

The thing is, they decompose many different species and I've only found them on conifers which may be why they aren't tasting good. I wouldn't be surprised if they tasted better growing on hardwoods. The same can be said of honey mushrooms in the midwest. My relatives pick a bunch but don't bother collecting them if they aren't growing out of deciduous tree remains.
 
C

CaliGabe

I ended up finding 1 sorry morel while on a hike in the canyon behind me in CO. There's some shroom hunters around here yet wasn't up for a hike that weekend. Need to find out what they got.
 

Classic Seeds

Member
Veteran
the only time hen of the woods are any good at all is when they are soft and when you cut thru them its like a knife through soft butter otherwise they taste like wood and have about the same consitancy when cooked .its only a few days they are soft then each day they harden more and more and become woody .its usually the first mushroom people successfully identify when they are a novice because of its easy identifying features .aloha cls
 

DIDM

Malaika
Veteran
can you see these

QD2SSCN.jpg


IyN1wqe.jpg


n10OVSt.jpg




not my pics, just spreading the word on Opal Creek, it's a magical place,look it up
 
C

Cep

Nice! Cauliflower mushrooms are always one of the better finds of the season. Fungus gnat larvae really love them but they never really get into the thin lobes on the top of the mushroom. Such a good edible.
 
C

Cep

Slow season

Slow season

Even if the morels don't flush well there are usually enough boletus to make it worth the drive:
picture.php
picture.php
picture.php
picture.php
picture.php


2500-3000' on the back side of Mt. Hood.
 

stasis

Registered Non-Conformist
Veteran
Should be about time for the NorCal contingent to be finding a few.. Missin those hedgehogs.
 

Biosynthesis

Member
Veteran
RECENT FINDS

RECENT FINDS

MATSUTAKE------ (Tricholoma magnivlare)

picture.php






Golden Chanterelles---------(Cantherellus cibarius)

picture.php






Shaggy parasol-----------(Lepiota rachodes)

picture.php





Ganoderma -------------(sp. var.?) G. Lucidum?

picture.php






King Bolete-------------(Boletus edulus)

picture.php
 

stasis

Registered Non-Conformist
Veteran
Ya baby...! I may make a quick trip out there after all the rain, not sure I can even get in right now. But, just to get my feet wet for a couple weeks and visit friends. One lives near a great forest for hedgies. Probably a swamp ATM.
 

Dr.NO

Active member
IMG_0356.jpg

These aren't foraged for by me but this is a mushroom stand in a open air market in Munich. I was in Germany in August and Chanterelles were in season.
 

stasis

Registered Non-Conformist
Veteran
Dr. NO looks like fun..!

So, Michigan is Morel Hungry now. Apparently, it is a good and early season up north. Record finds in other states to our south.

There was a frost last night.. Hope to get out to the northlands, very soon.. Maybe for good.

Cheers.
 
Top