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Matt McDermott

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Everything posted by Matt McDermott

  1. Thanks, This same tree has been a great producer, flushes a couple times a year like this since i found it looking for chant's 4 years ago.
  2. Finally took a walk after the rain and found a nice tree full of big oysters. some were a bit buggy but not bad.
  3. Found quite a few in S. OH while out turkey chasing last week. I think after 3 days we had about 5-6lbs.
  4. Maybe Laccaria ochropurpurea? Would have white spore print.
  5. Good find (as long as they print right). Have not found any yet this fall. All of my normal leaf compost areas I find them in are still a no show.
  6. I've only used them in the Spring and never this old. They tend to be best when very young. I would think these may be past salvageable, but maybe someone else has a different idea.
  7. Not sure which, or if, pleurotos this is. Big Maple log. 'Hairy' caps and stem bases.
  8. Look at Pleurotus ostreatus.
  9. Weird, never saw anything like that
  10. Pholiota limonella or P. aurivella maybe?
  11. So, Chestnut bolete pores fo from whitish to pale yellow when older. It looks like the pore surface in the picture is more pink. This may be a type of tylopilus?
  12. Look into Entoloma abortivum. https://www.google.com/url?q=https://www.mushroomexpert.com/entoloma_abortivum.html&sa=U&ved=2ahUKEwj23oHQkP3dAhWxs1kKHWVRDK0QFjAHegQICBAB&usg=AOvVaw2dtNmywD-j0sJ_AZivq5S3
  13. Look into Lepista Nuda. Should have off white too pinkish spore print, cort will have rusty brown print. Some corts are very toxic. Just my opinion, wait for others.
  14. I usually put in a range of hard mast/soft mast producing plants that have quick yields as well as annual food plots. This year is a couple acres of sorghum, turkeys appreciate the seed heads above the snow..
  15. I did the same thing on a few acres at my place, only 50-100 plants. Took a couple years but they are starting to get productive.
  16. 'Chestnut bolete' grows near hardwoods, usually oak. Would need pic of stem and pores for proper i.d.
  17. Look like Suillus americanus, 'chicken fat suillus '. They grow near white pine. I think I saw pine needles in the pic. I have eaten a small portion of some, they are difficult to clean as it is recommended to remove the pore tubes and cuticle layer as these can cause gastric problems.
  18. Cool, blewit has a white buff to slight pink print, corts have rusty colored print.
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