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Thuja

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    Maine

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  1. Thank you Dave for explaining the nuances of these mushrooms. Next year I'll look for young Hypholoma and confirm spore prints, staying away from anything rust colored. I see the gills on King Stropharia look similar to Hypholoma.
  2. Thanks might be right Michele. Think I'll avoid eating as deadly Galerina marginata also has dark spore print. It's not Sulfur Tuft bc that has green gills.
  3. Thanks, these all seem safe to eat, so I'll be on the lookout next summer/early fall (in Maine). I see that Cuphophyllus genus was Hygrocybe (moss-rooted).
  4. On conifer stump, spore print is purplish black.
  5. Thanks, maybe H. eburneus, chrysodon, or hedrychii.
  6. Found these tender baby polypores on birch; they're wavy and overlapping which I don't find in mature birch polypore...suggestions please?
  7. Thanks Michelle. I see some resemblance although it lacks the concavity of funnel mushrooms I'm seeing online.
  8. Thanks Dave! Their color is nice; too bad unedible. Spore print is peach colored which seems close to pink that I'm reading about for Phyllotopsis nidulans.
  9. That's great thanks, I'll look out next year. They froze/thawed probably 10 times already.
  10. Thanks Dave, are these safe to eat? It doesn't look like H. conicus.
  11. Slimy cap and stem, heavily gilled, growing in pine woods, breaks apart very easily.
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