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View Full Version : Are these chanterelle mushrooms?



LittleLebowski
09-05-2020, 01:21 PM
I know, I know, no old and bold shroom hunters, not legal advice, and so on.

59915

MickAK
09-05-2020, 02:54 PM
I know, I know, no old and bold shroom hunters, not legal advice, and so on.

59915

I would say yes but take a close look for the false gills to be sure. https://www.mushroom-appreciation.com/chanterelle-mushrooms.html#sthash.QmXDR6mY.dpbs

Jakus
09-05-2020, 03:22 PM
I know, I know, no old and bold shroom hunters, not legal advice, and so on.

59915

First bidets, now mushroom foraging, what time is afternoon tea at your house?

blues
09-05-2020, 03:25 PM
First bidets, now mushroom foraging, what time is afternoon tea at your house?

First he has to bake his crumpets and scones...

LittleLebowski
09-05-2020, 03:55 PM
False gills, white meat, looks like chanterelles.

59929

the Schwartz
09-05-2020, 05:27 PM
I know, I know, no old and bold shroom hunters, not legal advice, and so on.

59915

Yep, they look to be chanterelles. July to September is prime time for them. They are mycorrhizal, so they are typically found around root systems of hardwood trees, especially where erosion causes the roots to be closer to the surface. We find them all the time in northern Michigan near the Au Sable river where I go kayaking and deer hunting.

Grey
09-05-2020, 05:53 PM
I want to know when LittleLebowski eats them...

LittleLebowski
09-05-2020, 06:17 PM
I want to know when LittleLebowski eats them...

Coupla hours ago, not tripping balls yet :(

awp_101
09-05-2020, 06:25 PM
Coupla hours ago, not tripping balls yet :(

2020 continues to disappoint, que no?

LittleLebowski
09-05-2020, 06:42 PM
2020 continues to disappoint, que no?

Si:(

Yung
09-05-2020, 06:57 PM
How'd you eat 'em?

Lex Luthier
09-05-2020, 07:02 PM
If you have more, try them fried lightly in butter and served with scrambled eggs and sliced green onions...

Sensei
09-05-2020, 08:04 PM
Coupla hours ago, not tripping balls yet :(

The real danger is Amanita species. I have no idea what it looks like but GI symptoms that happen after 6-12 hours are no bueno. In fact, they’re muy mal.

Based on your original post, I’m not going telling you anything that you don’t already know. However, using the internet to determine if what you are about to ingest is potentially deadly may itself be hazardous to your health. Even around here where most of us like you. ;)

UNM1136
09-07-2020, 11:20 AM
Amitas are the only ones I can ID with no niggling questions...

I did a psilocybin grow bust a couple years back and the cheesy smell was an instant turn off.


pat

Clusterfrack
09-07-2020, 11:30 AM
I know, I know, no old and bold shroom hunters, not legal advice, and so on.

59915

Stand by. Getting expert advice.

Glenn E. Meyer
09-07-2020, 11:47 AM
I had a friend in Oregon, when we lived there, who had a reliable patch of Chanterelles on her cabin land. Great stuff. Oregon had quite a few Amanitas around also. My kid and I used to go to the annual mushroom show. Fascinating.

Way back a Vietnamese family picked some as they resembled some mushroom from home. Took them all down and they need emergency liver transplants - it depleted the state's budget for such and caused a bit of a controversy.

Supposedly, chanterelles are one of the 4 easy to identify edibles. But be careful.

Clusterfrack
09-07-2020, 11:48 AM
Golden chanterelles!

Glenn E. Meyer
09-07-2020, 12:08 PM
As an aside, in Lake Oswego, OR, the Quakers owned a big field that grew lots of Psilocybin in season. The locals would wait and then harvest them. Since the Quakers did not object to the harvest, the local law did nothing. However, the Quakers sold the land to the Mormons and that took care of that.

the Schwartz
09-07-2020, 12:43 PM
Golden chanterelles!

They're probably Craterellus confluens if I was forced to get all taxonomic about it.

If they smelled slightly sweet, had a light yellow spore print, and the flesh didn't darken after being cut, that'd be what I'd bet on them being.

LittleLebowski
09-07-2020, 01:29 PM
Still have a lot of black trumpets on the ground, harvest en mass or harvest as needed?

lwt16
09-07-2020, 01:32 PM
Still have a lot of black trumpets on the ground, harvest en mass or harvest as needed?

Treat them like black eyed peas and eat 365 of them in one sitting.

Hopefully, you get some use out of the bidet later.

the Schwartz
09-07-2020, 02:07 PM
Still have a lot of black trumpets on the ground, harvest en mass or harvest as needed?

You have a lot of oaks there? 'Cause that's how you get black trumpets.

I'd get them while you can. They don't last long after they hit maturity.