1066familyman
Radio User
- Jan 15, 2008
- 15,233
The Prince (I think) from yesterday:
And my answer to David Sylvian's - Dead Bees on a Cake:
And my answer to David Sylvian's - Dead Bees on a Cake:
Did you get any confirmation on The Prince that you found? I came upon just the one of these and it has the similar spot on the top...I did not pick it as it was the only one..The Prince (I think) from yesterday:
View attachment 152952
And my answer to David Sylvian's - Dead Bees on a Cake:
View attachment 152953
That's a Lepiota of some sort. Parasol family.Did View attachment 152996you get any confirmation on The Prince that you found? I came upon just the one of these and it has the similar spot on the top...I did not pick it as it was the only one..
Honey fungus. Check out all the black bootlace like rhizomorphs on the dead wood above them. Classic id help, and why some people call them bootlace fungus.
Cheers for that, there were some Parasols in the area picked 2-3 that had yet to open up but bottled out of eating them as I could not get a 100% ID on them.That's a Lepiota of some sort. Parasol family.
The Prince is an Agaricus, same family as field mushrooms. I'm 99% sure it was The Prince but I didn't pick it as was near the beginning of a longish walk, primarily on a photography mission.
Funnily enough I found a little cluster of oldish Lepiota in the field just before the field with The Prince in. They were under an oak tree and of a size and growing habit that had me wondering on their exact id.Cheers for that, there were some Parasols in the area picked 2-3 that had yet to open up but bottled out of eating them as I could not get a 100% ID on them.
It can be.I thought this mushrooming thread was some sort of sex activity ??That I had never heard of !
Possibly not the answer you want to hear but I'll refer you to this:Calling @1066familyman .....loads of these local to me, I keep getting Bloody Milkcap when I try to id them, I can't believe they are edible though. Growing in grass near a Cherry tree that was sawn down 3 years back but roots were never dug out...if its an eater ( unlikely ) I'll tell you where...cheers !View attachment 153025View attachment 153026View attachment 153027
Will crush one when I'm there next and try that. 15,000 options does not give me much chance/hope...was rather hoping you recognised them as they seem pretty common.Btw Vegster. Did you touch them at all? If they're in the milk cap family they'll exude a milky sap.
Did you crush one in the end?Will crush one when I'm there next and try that. 15,000 options does not give me much chance/hope...was rather hoping you recognised them as they seem pretty common.