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DShroomGuy

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Everything posted by DShroomGuy

  1. Looks very much like a king bolete to me however not an expert here.
  2. Since I have an interest in mushrooms and often pick edible species for eating purposes my young girl starts grabbing at potentially bad mushrooms in the yard. Guess the best thing one can do is be there observing making sure to tell them not all mushrooms are safe. Just be on your game is the best advice I can give. Don't allow them the chance of eating so called bad mushrooms. Stuff hapoens nonetheless no matter how hard you try. Life isn't seemingly perfect. Until they are old enough to know better just be there for them the best you can.
  3. Unfortunately don't have the mushroom any longer. Hopefully I can find more eventually at the same spot. These are edible right? Chanterelles are starting to pop good in my area. I'll be back to that same spot here shortly.
  4. Pretty sure of the ID on this one but always best to be totally sure. Found in the leaf litter near a swamp in an area with cypress, oaks, tupelo, birch, pines, etc. Usually find lots of chanterelles and ringless honeys in the same area. Not sure the lighting is the greatest for the pics but this specimen is definitely blue. Deep cobalt type blue. If the sun comes out I may try to get better color pics. Been wanting to find this species for awhile. Hopefully I can definitively ad this to my list of good finds.
  5. I know it's discouraged to talk about psychoactive mushrooms on this forum beyond just an ID purpose. However after seeing a plethora of dried psilocybe cubensis mushrooms in my day I would say that's what you have there. I'm 100% confident in my ID though I'm sure many would say that's not of the correct way to approach a sample as in the pic you posted. As general mushroom procedure is concerned don't eat anything you cannot confidently ID. Best to be on the side of caution nonetheless. It cannot ever hurt you if you don't eat them.
  6. Wish I still had the pics of a hot pink Ganoderma I once found in Central Florida. Definitely think it was a Ganoderma. Been back to the area multiple times but none have popped up again.
  7. I agree with honey mushrooms but as stated a bit far gone. I gotta get out looking. Usually find a lot of these.
  8. Perhaps the bigger one in your hand might be but I'm unsure. The other I dont think are at all. I relied on the other thread as well. Please see what I wrote there.
  9. I'm thinking no you don't have liberty caps there. Would wait for other opinions though. Doesn't look like a psilocybe genus mushroom to me. If it was it would leave a purplish blackish spore print I believe. On another note discussion of psychoactive fungi isn't much a thing here. The shroomery or mycotopia is better suited for that. Someone may ID an active species for you here but won't encourage anything otherwise. I always found psychoactive species very interesting myself as well but knowing the community here isn't geared toward that I don't bring up those topics here.
  10. I would guess this is in the genus Agaricus or meadow mushrooms
  11. So is this a variation or close relation of ringless honey mushrooms?
  12. Its looks as if they are reishi. Maybe some very young fruit bodies forming in the first 2 pics. The third definitely is a more developed reishi(or ganoderma rather) of some sort.
  13. Deer commonly eat certain mushrooms. I've seen stomachs cut open from local deer that were full of mushrooms. If I had to guess probably honey mushrooms. If that mushroom is toxic or something they don't like they definitely won't mess with it so no worries there. They instinctively know what not to eat. There isn't nobody out in the woods pulling up toxic mushrooms so they won't eat them. Wouldn't worry about that one bit.
  14. I would say the first set of pics are Pan cyans. Note the bluing. The second set of pics by Drphilthy is Pan antillarum. Note no bluing at all. Just my guesses though. I'm no mushroom expert in general. However I've studied dung loving pasture mushrooms quite extensively.
  15. The first post with pics are definitely the right ones. The second post pic by Bobby shows more than one kind of mushrooms. The top two mushrooms I don't think are pans at all. The others that are smashed up I believe are panaeolus antillarum other than the one with the fat stem which is something else. No bluish bruises. These are not the pans you are likely looking for.
  16. Besides for the orange ones the others I believe are panaeolus cyanescens or tropicalis(might be spelled wrong). If the bruise them or bend the stems and they stain blue it would confirm that ID more. If they don't stain blue they most likely are panaeolus antillarum(also might be spelled wrong).
  17. Here's an interesting read that relates to your thread. https://learnyourland.com/angel-wing-mushroom-pleurocybella-porrigens-deadly-or-not/
  18. This article is an interesting read that relates to your thread. https://learnyourland.com/angel-wing-mushroom-pleurocybella-porrigens-deadly-or-not/
  19. Definitely a panaeolus. Not sure of exact species though.
  20. Found these red capped yellow pored blue staining(on the pores at least) bolete under an Eastern red cedar in North Florida. Reddish blush on stem. Cut across the stem did not blue immediately but a scratch to the pores did. Nibble test not bitter. What are these guys?
  21. It does appear you gave found chanterelles. However wait for other confirmation. If your sure the under surface of the cap is ridges and not true gills you are good to go.
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