The Ultimate "What is this Fungi?" thread.

Chiseller

Bushcrafter through and through
Oct 5, 2011
6,176
3
West Riding
Just eaten my first shaggy cap....gorgeous....I'm now never going to pass one again thinking I'll get it later , only to find it gone :(

Which mushroom is this then ......

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The Mighty Oak Is Merely A Nut Who Stood His Ground
 

Chiseller

Bushcrafter through and through
Oct 5, 2011
6,176
3
West Riding
Far too rare to consider eating, and probably poisonous anyway. They are pretty impressive mushrooms, not that I see them very often...

Respect and protect the rare and one day to forage them when needed may be fair ? ;)

The Mighty Oak Is Merely A Nut Who Stood His Ground
 
Apr 28, 2007
8
0
42
North Yorkshire
I was out this morning and came across about a dozen of these, I cant seem to find them in a Collins pocket guide I have and didn't have my camera with me so brought one back and took pictures at home, as you can see they are huge! this wasn't even the biggest
6452012515_15e7dc2f05_m.jpg
 
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red devil

Forager
Dec 1, 2010
114
0
South of Glasgow
Blimey, who'd-a-thunk there were some many funghi lying around UK woodlands?
I'm very new at this game and it's fascinating stuff, isn't it - it's taken me a week of constant repetition to remember the latin name for birch polypore!
I found these little guys lying on dead trunks near my house yesterday and I can't find them in my UK wildlife guide (don't have a specialist funghi guide yet but maybe Santa will be kind to me this year).
Can anyone offer any suggestions?
The largest are only about 2inches across at the most.

imag03611k.jpg
[/URL] Uploaded with ImageShack.us[/IMG]

Thanks in advance,
Steve
 

Geoff Dann

Native
Sep 15, 2010
1,252
31
56
Sussex
www.geoffdann.co.uk
I was out this morning and came across about a dozen of these, I cant seem to find them in a Collins pocket guide I have and didn't have my camera with me so brought one back and took pictures at home, as you can see they are huge! this wasn't even the biggest
6452012515_15e7dc2f05_m.jpg

That's one of two species I find hard enough to distinguish in the flesh, let alone from a picture. There's an outside chance it is Giant Funnel (Leucopaxillus giganteus), but I think it is Trooping Funnel (Clitocybe geotropa). Both edible when young, and lots of the latter about at the moment.
 

Geoff Dann

Native
Sep 15, 2010
1,252
31
56
Sussex
www.geoffdann.co.uk
Blimey, who'd-a-thunk there were some many funghi lying around UK woodlands?

There's about four times as many native and naturalised non-microscopic fungi in the UK (approx 10,000) as there are native and naturalised non-microscopic plants (approx 2,500).

I'm very new at this game and it's fascinating stuff, isn't it - it's taken me a week of constant repetition to remember the latin name for birch polypore!
I found these little guys lying on dead trunks near my house yesterday and I can't find them in my UK wildlife guide (don't have a specialist funghi guide yet but maybe Santa will be kind to me this year).
Can anyone offer any suggestions?
The largest are only about 2inches across at the most.

imag03611k.jpg
[/URL] Uploaded with ImageShack.us[/IMG]

Thanks in advance,
Steve

Hi Steve

Not easy. Have you got any other shots? I can't quite work out what the underside is like. Pores? Teeth? Do you know what sort of wood it is? What does it feel like? How tough is the flesh? Does it smell of anything?

If possible, cut one in half and show us a section.

It may be one of the many fungi that occur in the northern half of Scotland but are absent from most of the rest of the UK. I'm pretty sure I've never seen it before, and I don't think it is in any of my books. Not that that is all that unusual...

Geoff
 
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red devil

Forager
Dec 1, 2010
114
0
South of Glasgow
Ooh, a mystery... brilliant! I'm away to my work this afternoon but first thing tomorrow I'll drag the pup back down the woods and do some more forensic stuff - will get some samples/pics etc and post again soon (that's if I can find them again under last night's blanket of thick snow).
Cheers for now Geoff,
Steve
 

red devil

Forager
Dec 1, 2010
114
0
South of Glasgow
Damn weather... went back to the woods briefly this morning to try to find the fungi I posted about yesterday but everywhere is under a foot of snow. I'll keep popping back until I find them and will post more info.
Steve
 

Emdiesse

Settler
Jan 9, 2005
629
5
Surrey, UK
I went on a little forage on Sunday to look for some cramp ball fungus (I have just bought a fire piston), my eagle eye girlfriend spotted a big cluster of them so I took a few older black ones to dry out. On our little excursion through the woods we spotted loads of mushrooms and despite my best efforts to identify them in some of my mushroom books I could not find any of them. Is someone able to point me towards a good resource to teach how to identify mushrooms... what mycological characteristics to look for and how to them find them in identification books or online, etc.

Here are some of the mushrooms we saw on our travels:

1. Looks dead, but was a huge bracket fungus on a chopped down oak. I did discover that oak trees can have a huge parasitic fungus that rots the inside of the tree and when the fruiting body is seen then the tree is lost... But this chopped down oaks insides looks healthy to my untrained eye. Any ideas what this is, or if it is the parasitic fungus I found in one of my books (Inonotus dryadeus)?



2. Jelly-like, black, dead oak - bulgaria inquinans? (in the uk?)
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3.

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4.
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5.
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6.
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7. This looks like a puffball to me... but growing on a tree stump? Or is it growing from the moss? I thought they grew on the ground, so what is it?
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8.
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9.
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Thanks,
Matt
 

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