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  2. How to find morels, and other tips for novice mushroom hunters

    www.aol.com/morels-other-tips-novice-mushroom...

    The prime time for morel mushroom hunting is mid-March through late April. Here are tips for finding them. ... 5 tips for cooking morel mushrooms, with help from Hotel Vandivort's new executive chef.

  3. Mushroom hunting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mushroom_hunting

    Mushroom hunting, mushrooming, mushroom picking, mushroom foraging, and similar terms describe the activity of gathering mushrooms in the wild. This is typically done for culinary use, although medicinal and psychotropic uses are also known.

  4. This fall is the best mushroom-hunting season in years ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/ink-caps-angel-wings-chicken...

    Ink caps, angel wings, chicken of the woods. There are great places to find them in Pierce County.

  5. Morchella esculenta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morchella_esculenta

    [11] The species has been named state mushroom of Minnesota, and was the first state mushroom of any state. [24] [25] It can also be found in Brazil and Bulgaria. [26] In Jammu and Kashmir wild mushrooms, locally known as Himalayan wild mushroom, Gucchi, Morchella conica and Morchella esculenta, are gathered and supplied as medical remedy. [27]

  6. Leon Frey, a field mycologist and foraging guide in the U.K., told The Guardian he spotted serious flaws in the mushroom field guides suspected of being written by A.I. Among them: referring to ...

  7. Panaeolus cinctulus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panaeolus_cinctulus

    The possession and use of psilocybin mushrooms, including P. cinctulus, is therefore prohibited by extension. However, in many national, state, and provincial drug laws, there is a great deal of ambiguity about the legal status of psilocybin mushrooms and the spores of these mushrooms. Panaeolus cinctulus is mildly psychoactive. [5]

  8. Gymnopilus aeruginosus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gymnopilus_aeruginosus

    Gymnopilus aeruginosus, also known as the magic blue gym, is a mushroom-forming fungus that grows in clusters on dead wood and wood chip mulch. It is widely distributed and common in the Pacific Northwest.

  9. Gymnopilus luteoviridis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gymnopilus_luteoviridis

    Pileus: 2.5-4 cm in diameter, moderately thick (4–5 mm), convex to subconic with an incurved margin when young, becoming nearly flat.Straw yellow to mustard yellow, smooth, conspicuously fibrillose, with pale fulvous scales along the margin and becoming olivaceous towards the center of the cap, flesh the same color as the surface.