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gregorybaldi09

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About gregorybaldi09

  • Birthday 08/30/1985

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Laconia, NH
  • Interests
    Mushroom hunting

gregorybaldi09's Achievements

Agaricus Newbie

Agaricus Newbie (1/5)

  1. Growing on a fallen tree. These look like turkey tail but I need help identifying them.
  2. North Western United States. New Hampshire. Found growing on a dead birch bark tree. I've never seen anything like these before.
  3. Growing Under a Pine Tree in the Fall Found in Eastern North America (Laconia, NH) Growing Alone Orange-Yellow Cap White Bell-Shaped Rounded Bulb Bottom at the Base Partial Veil Skirt Ring Around the Upper Stem Near the Cap White Stem White Warts Pale Cream Gills Gills are White Does Not Stain when Cut Flesh Unchanged when Cut No Odor Sticky when Wet Gills Appear to Attach to the Stem Could possibly be: Amanita Muscaria Var. Guessowii Amanita Muscaria Var. Persicina
  4. Trying to figure out what type of Amanita this is. This was growing next to a conifer pine tree in the soil located in Laconia, New Hampshire. I'm leaning towards it possibly being the American Yellow Fly Agaric Amanita Muscaria Var Guessowii. Any help would be great as I'm new to all this.
  5. I'd have to agree on that it is most likely Hypholoma Lateritium. Hypholoma lateritium Identification Ecology Saprobic; growing in clusters on decaying hardwood logs and stumps; fall; widely distributed in North America but more common east of the Rocky Mountains. Cap 3-10 cm; convex, becoming broadly convex, nearly flat, or irregular in age; with an incurved margin when young; bald; dry or moist; brick red overall, but paler (pinkish to buff) on the margin, especially when young; the margin sometimes hung with wispy veil fragments. Gills Attached to the stem; close or crowded; when young covered by a whitish, cortina-like veil; whitish when very young, but soon pale gray to gray, becoming purple-gray to dark purple-brown with maturity; short-gills frequent. Stem 4-12 cm long; 1-2 cm thick; more or less equal, or twisted and tapering to base due to the clustered growth pattern; bald, or finely hairy near the apex; often featuring an ephemeral or persistent ring zone near the top; yellowish to whitish above, brown to reddish below; sometimes bruising and staining yellow. Flesh Firm; whitish to yellowish. Odor and Taste Odor not distinctive; taste mild or slightly bitter. Chemical Reactions KOH brownish on cap surface. Spore Print Purple brown. Hypholoma Lateritium Look-Alikes Hypholoma Capnoides Is a similar species but grows on conifer wood and has a yellowish-brown to tan to the orangish-brown cap. Hypholoma Fasciculare Inedible, and poisonous mushroom is also known as sulphur tuft Source: https://ultimate-mushroom.com/edible/202-hypholoma-lateritium.html
  6. Looking for help identifying these beauties. They are growing on the roots of a recently fallen adult tree. 🤔 1. Tree unkown 2. Mushroom spore print is dark purple/black 3. Brown rusty orange caps 4. Dry conditions so didnt bruise much but appeared to turn slightly black/purple
  7. I need some help identifying this mushroom I found at Angkor Wat Temple in Cambodia.
  8. Visiting Angkor Wat temple in Cambodia I came across these bad boys and think that they might be reishi and turkey tail. I'm interested in making a tincture health extraction both boiling and 100% proof. Before I proceed with that I was hoping to get some feedback on the identity for the following: A, B, and C.
  9. These are 100% in the Agaricus family - after looking once more they have yellow staining which would make it an Agaricus Xanthodermus
  10. I found these growing in the park about 15 feet from a tree in the grass in clusters today and was having trouble identifying them. This was around San Rafael Park in Reno Nevada. The area is wet from the stream and has lots of swans, ducks, and dogs on a daily basis. Please Help Me Identify Mushroom Find 10-11-18 I'm hoping to get some insight on these puppies.
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