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Hoosierfunguy

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Posts posted by Hoosierfunguy

  1. Welcome Annette. There are so many ways to learn.  The best thing I've found is to get out into the woods and glean from a many as you can as well as read some good books.  This forum has a few very knowledgeable people and they have forays every year. 

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  2. Welcome Mr. Guy..We're all novices.  The smartest of us all doesn't even know 1% of everything there is to know about one mushroom,  but we're learning...lol Really cool user name btw. I live in Northwest Indiana.  I've never found the mother load of morels,  but I have found the Mother Load of many other delectable Micro Rhizome Fungi fruiting bodies. 

  3. Cool.  Thanks Chris. I'm curious to know if the properties are the same (or similar) as Chaga found on Birch,  Aspen and Poplar,  being an immune system booster,  with antioxidants and effective at fighting cancer.  They were both found on white oak trees,  being the second and third fruiting bodies I've found on oaks, all within 100 yards of each other.  

  4. It's not Chaga. I saw this exact same formation on a wounded oak tree around here.  It's a growth.  My first thought was Chaga, But like you noted,  it wasn't on birch. After having found Chaga in Minnesota, it is not Chaga.  The look alike that I found on an oak appears to be some kind of sap build up on a diseased oak,  as when I cut it off,  there was quite a bit of liquid.  The inside doesn't have that golden color to it.  It's more rusty.  

     

  5. Great topic.  I started my mycology adventure using the ASFGNAWM also. Early in my identification years,  I came across what I thought were parasol mushrooms.  If I remember correctly,, the field guide mentioned that the toxic lookalike was uncommon and could be positively identified by the spores under a microscope.  I didn't have a microscope,  so I played the odds.  That was a HUGE MISTAKE! I honestly thought I was going to die.  The vomiting was indeed violent and frequent.  It lasted for three full days and dehydrated me,  took all my energy and I felt like I was only moments away form becoming corpse finder matter.  With the naked eye,  I really don't think there's enough differences between the two, to positively identify,  but the book does describe the spore shapes which distinguish the difference.  I'm only going by memory,  so I might be mistaken in a point,  but I will never forget what I went through.  The lookalike is toxic enough to become fatal.  No mushroom is worth that risk.  That's why I have become a proponent of 100% positive identification before SAMPLING  a new mushroom.  

  6.  For some reason,  the notification link in gmail brings me to the forum in a different layout and in that layout,  the home link doesn't have the scheduled events,  but has a drop down menu, and in that menu,  it does have the "calendar" which doesn't have any events saved on it. However,  when I went directly to the website from my mobile browser,  the schedule appears on the actual home page.  This may be a gmail/ Google issue. 

  7. 5 hours ago, Chris Christensen said:

    It's on the HMS calendar or schedule of events.  I plan to attend that and brown county the day before.  I've hunted shades with both of you last year.  Hope to see you both again.

    Is the calendar your speaking of on a Facebook page? I've checked the calendar on this site and there's nothing. 

  8. It looks to be a Purple spore puffball. They are probably the only puffball i enjoy eating with a really rich mushroom flavor. But you never want to eat any puffballs that don't have solid white flesh.  There's also a toxic look alike called a pigskin poison puffball. The outer layer looks a little different, but they are small in size and similar in color.  When in doubt,  throw it out.  

  9. 15 hours ago, Lotusflower198237 said:

    Elm, oak, tulip

    I can only suggest that you be sure of the tree ID and seek out the older, larger trees.  Morel season is nearing its end in southern Indiana. Another strategy I've hear heard repeatedly is to check out areas where there has been a fire within the last few years.  I hope you find the motherload! ????

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