Anistara wrote:
... so i was told tonight that a guy nearby says mushrooms grow on his property, he has like 40 acres or thereabouts. i know that morel season was a couple of months ago and i've seen a few species otherwise (boletas and the usual suspects in forests). but it was said that he also had magic mushies growing and for some reason i thought they didn't grow here... does anyone know how i might find out. so far, all my friends have said they don't, but i don't think they know fer realz... i wasn't convinced... i am now living near mount shasta

i haven't hunted in years, but how fun that would be!!
i know the guy is new to the fungi and he's just doing research. oh yes, i'll be contacting him to let him let me be his field guide...
First, for the record, Boletas is spelled as Boletus, no a in the word, and for short some say Boletes when referring to the genus. And Boletus grow everywhere beginning about now. Until the freeze.
I doubt that Liberty Caps grow in pastures around the Shasta area of Humbolt, but they are a fall cold weather species and it is still a little too warm for them but I have not heard of anyone finding libs in that area. When they do grow they like tall rank grasses and sedge grass and grow in manured fields and even manured lawns in parks, soccer fields, but never directly in manure. Bt then again I do not think they are in your area. It is still to warm for them to appear. However, they grow farther north than Shasta.
P. cyanescens, P. cyanofibrilosa, P. cyanofriscosa/cyanfriscana grow in alder twigs, branches and stems in the colder months up until the freeze, appearing in public places in major cities and towns in garden mulched areas in public parks, around condos, apartment buildings, new restaurants. They are a cold weather species and those are potent cold weather species. And they get extremely blue when damaged either from human handling or from natural elements such as wind, slugs chewing on them, squirrels love them and you can usually see a bluing reaction within a few minutes after squeezing them.
Magic shrooms such as those potent bluing shrooms I mentioned grow from San Francisco Bay area north to BC and are also common in quantities in Golden Gate park and other parks north of Shasta..
Blue ringers grow in lawns from Arcada/Eureka to BC.
read the field guide at
http://www.mushroomjohn.org/species.htm and there you can find the ultimate guide to shrooming in the PNW and 65 species of magic shrooms are described, of which 22 grow specifically in the PNW and they are featured with more than four thousand photographs with thumbnails that enlarge to 7 1/2 inches in height. Learn to distinguish poisonous species from edible as well as from magic shrooms.
The site has over 14,000 photographs all related to magic mushrooms and is the largest single private free site on the internet to learn about magic shrooms. Dozens of published papers, five books, mushroom identification for five continents. Mushroom art, some of the most fantastic cultivation photographs ever posted on the internet in Psilocybian Mushroom Cultivation: A Brief History (212 pages and more than 380 color large photographs).
Chanterelles grow on the slopes of Shasta and matsutakes are also on the mountain, but then so are a lot of humbolt county pot growers and some do not take lightly to people prowling the woods in some areas of Shasta.
I actually saw 7 shaggy manes today and some Collybia species, the latter not edible.
Here is a good common edible, not the best but tasty with butter garlic and lemon and sliced and fried lightly. They are inky caps so you cannot boil or over cook them/
A few pictures.
Four images of Coprinus comatus on a condo lawn with automatic sprinkler systems and one which was growing in a sidewalk area where a dead tree has had all of its leaves fall to the ground. It is in a planter and had ivy growing from it and no one has watered the giant city planter. In the last few weeks, I have seen several trees in Planters along sidewalks near the freeway where the city has not been watering the planters so the tree can live and grow. Look at the size of those leaves. The ivy also was sompletely dead. I will take a photo tomorrow of one I saw today form the bus riding to visit a friend and this was on a major street near downtown Seattle and there were six lanters with trees, the leaves all dead and the ivy completely dead in the planters, hanging over the side, a complete waste of city money to plant them in those giant sized cement flower tree planter pots and then never water them.
The fifth image is also an edible, also on a lawn in Laurelhurst near the U-District. IT is Agaricus arvensis, a choce edible shroom. When young the gills are pure pink and then change to a beautiful chocolate-reddish-brown color. AS seen in the image.
So let me post these and then I crash.
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File comment: Coprinus comatus (Shaggy Mane) on a condo complex lawn near a woodsy forestry area in north Seattle near Laurelhurst 1
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File comment: Coprinus comatus (Shaggy Mane) on a condo complex lawn near a woodsy forestry area in north Seattle near Laurelhurst 2
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File comment: Coprinus comatus (Shaggy Mane) on a condo complex lawn near a woodsy forestry area in north Seattle near Laurelhurst 3
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And this one was the one growing along the sidewalk near the building with a tree planter with a dead tree and dead leaves for lackof water.