On the tenth of October this year, I drove about fifty kilometers to spend an hour or two in the rural area between the towns of Svetvinchenat and Zminj.
I found a nice variety of mushrooms ...
... so today, almost two months later, I finally decided to organize those findings and published them as a contribution to FungiFriday by @ewkaw
Before continuing, I would like to say that a few weeks earlier, on the 16th of September, I was searching for mushrooms in exactly the same place. I found a nice variety of mushrooms on that occasion as well, and I published a Fungi Friday post that same day, but the species there are different. The following link will take you to that old post if you wish to go there.
https://ecency.com/hive-151327/@borjan/mushrooms-on-the-edge-of
I put the link here because I think that observing how the place can change in a relatively short period of time with old mushrooms disappearing and new ones taking their place on the scene, could be fairly interesting while comparing the two posts.
With that said and out of the way, let's continue ...
Here you can see a small group of poisonous Amanita pantherina mushrooms.
Five or six meters further, while walking along the edge of the forest, I came across this beautiful Coprinopsis picacea inkcap. In young fruiting bodies, the egg-shaped cap is slightly shaggy and completely white. As the mushroom grows and the cap is slowly spreading into a shape that resamples a half-opened umbrella, the white layer on the top of the cap breaks into small, white patches on the dark brown background. The size and distribution of the shaggy white fragments vary from mushroom to mushroom. Not far from there, maybe another five meters or less ...
... I found another Amanita pantherina. In this one, the cap was completely spread and developed.
The flat top of the cap gave me an opportunity to get a clear, uniformly sharp photograph of the pattern on its surface. Like in all amanitas, the fruiting body of the Amanita pantherina emerges from the egg-like structure called the volva.
As the mushroom develops and spreads its cap that envelope gets broken into pieces. In this species, the remains of the volva look like warts, very different from those on the Amanita shown in the post from the 16th of September.
Here you can take a look at the setting. The meadow and the forest.
The withered mushrooms shown in this photograph were found in the middle of the meadow.
These are the edible Marasmius oreades mushrooms. The days were warm and sunny, and a gentle wind was blowing, so the mushrooms in the open spaces were getting dry & shriveled quickly.
Here you can see the scene from a bigger distance and a different perspective.
In the same area, more or less in the middle of the meadow, I also found a bunch of puffballs.
These Lycoperdon marginatum fruiting bodies were ready to release the spores. The mushrooms that you'll see in the following photograph ...
... were photographed closer to the line of trees on the edge of the meadow.
Here you can see the same mushrooms, but you can see them from a different angle. I wasn't able to identify these mushrooms.
Here you can see another trio made of mushrooms of the same kind. It seems that these fruiting bodies love growing in groups of three.
About twenty meters further along the edge of the meadow, I came across a considerably larger group of mushrooms.
And here again, I wasn't able to find out the name of the species. In the following photograph ...
... you can take a look at the scene from ground level. This angle reveals the gills under the cap. Not far from these mushrooms, just a couple of meters or so ...
... I noticed some big mushrooms scattered around the area very close to the trees on the edge of the forest.
These are the Lactarius scrobiculatus fruiting bodies.
Like all mushrooms from the genus Lactarius of the Russulaceae family, the Lactarius scrobiculatus fruiting bodies exude a milk-like liquid when cut or broken.
Here, you can see a pretty large, old, and partially rotten Lactarius scrobiculatus that grew under one of the oaks on the edge of the forest.
A couple of acorns and a leaf or two ended up on the top of the cap.
In some places along the edge of the forest, always in the shade provided by the trees ...
... I found plenty of beautiful droplets ...
... on the fallen leaves.
In the same area, surrounded by the brown foliage fallen from the oaks, there was this Russula vesca mushroom.
Here you can take a look from above and see the vivid color on the top of the cap. While I was photographing the Russula vesca ...
... a Cheiracanthium erraticum spider crawled out of the leaf litter.
A bit later, a couple of meters into the forest, I found a mushroom well - hidden among the ivy and the fallen leaves. It didn't look very photogenic when seen from above, but ...
... but from the ground level, this Agaricus silvicola was a joy to photograph.
Soon I found a pretty big droplet that stood out from the crowd, took this photograph, and then ...
... I walked directly to my car parked by the side of the unpaved road that leads into the forest. Before driving away, I photographed another Russula vesca that grew in that area, very close to the car.
And that's it. I don't have any more mushrooms to show, so the post must end here.
The following links will take you to the sites with more information about some of the protagonists of this post. I found some stuff about them there.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanita_pantherina
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coprinopsis_picacea
https://www.first-nature.com/fungi/marasmius-oreades.php
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lycoperdon_marginatum
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lactarius_scrobiculatus
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russula_vesca
https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/337724-Cheiracanthium-erraticum
AS ALWAYS HERE ON HIVE, THE PHOTOGRAPHS ARE MY WORK.
This is not the first time I notice that our thoughts converge) I plan to make a post about Amanita pantherina this week!
This mushroom does not grow here, but one friend treated me to some dried hats (which were sent to him from somewhere in Siberia), and of course I ate them))) What about you, have you tried them?
Never tried them. 🙂How was your experience?
It all depends on the amount eaten) But this is not about hallucinations, but rather about concentrating on one thought and action ... I advise you to try (for general development), but before that you should watch a few videos about how experienced people eat them)
Cool. I'll try if I have an opportunity. I tried a few times only some central American species that a friend cultivates in his cupboard. Those are more about the classic hallucinatory effects.
Was it Psilocybe cubensis? I’ve been dreaming of trying them for a very long time, but it’s impossible to get them from us, and you can’t buy mycelium either .... (
yes, those. I ate the last I had a couple of months ago.
Lucky you are!)
This post was shared and voted inside the discord by the curators team of discovery-it
Join our community! hive-193212
Discovery-it is also a Witness, vote for us here
Delegate to us for passive income. Check our 80% fee-back Program
This post has been manually curated by @bhattg from Indiaunited community. Join us on our Discord Server.
Do you know that you can earn a passive income by delegating to @indiaunited. We share 100 % of the curation rewards with the delegators.
Here are some handy links for delegations: 100HP, 250HP, 500HP, 1000HP.
Read our latest announcement post to get more information.
Please contribute to the community by upvoting this comment and posts made by @indiaunited.
Congratulations, your post has been upvoted by @dsc-r2cornell, which is the curating account for @R2cornell's Discord Community.
Yay! 🤗
Your content has been boosted with Ecency Points, by @borjan.
Use Ecency daily to boost your growth on platform!
Support Ecency
Vote for new Proposal
Delegate HP and earn more
These are excellent photos of mushrooms, taken with masterful skills, these are so natural that almost seem to be able to be touched!.... It is also a post with good complementary data and well written.... Good job @borjan friend!... Thanks for sharing!
!discovery 40
!PIZZA
Thank you. 🙂
I could eat 'shrooms & seaweeds to not get old😹✌
😆 I could eat even more to get young again 🤣
heyy😂😂you're not that old
🤣
That's a decent variety of mushroom that you found. Some of those are epic looking - all proud and regal. The last photo of the mushroom pushing its way out of the ground is really cool also. Nice shots 👍
Nice finds again! Did you take the Lactarius back home to eat? I love visiting nearby forest all year round to see the changes 💙
I left the mushrooms there on that occasion. I had other things in the fridge, waiting to be eaten before rotting 🙂
I know the feeling. I usually skip hedgehogs too, until there is nothing else to pick 😂
😃
Hello dear friend @borjan good day
What a beautiful place to look for mushrooms, the humidity of the ground allows development well
I think it was worth driving 50 kilometers, you have found a good amount and variety of mushrooms.
excellent shots
enjoy the weekend
Thanks 🙂 Have a great weekend.
Wonderful finds of these mushrooms. Such a diversity.
Beautifully captured @borjan 😊🤗 thanks for sharing them with us.
Have an awesome weekend 👋🏻☀️
there are so many types of mushrooms that you will find this month, all of them are varied, different types of drums, different colors will be shown, all of them are of high quality, it turns out that your trip to go mushroom hunting this time is a big luck for you because you can find many types of mushrooms. types of mushrooms, for you to show in front of us all... thank you very much for sharing, I hope you are always healthy my friend @borjan
It seems that you find various types of beautiful mushrooms there, and what impresses me the most is the mushroom that you display in the first place and it looks like it has a very large size. 😁👍
Great pics as usual - the first one is awesome !!
!PIZZA
Thanks. 🙂 Glad you like this walk among mushrooms.
Mwow, , you found a very nice mushroom on this day.
They all look very beautiful and charming.
A good shot for today.
you get so many mushrooms growing in that area, there are some mushrooms that look like they are starting to wilt and some are still fresh, I am amazed by one long black mushroom there is a white spot on the umbrella it looks so long
Wow... Hope this post can choosen in #fungifriday. The first one is very big mushroom and the fourth one is pretty Poisonous Amanita. Wonderful.
Woah.. this all varieties of mushrooms and spider or that detail in nature is beautiful!
As always Amazing collection of Pictures. !PIZZA
None of those mushrooms are edibles? they seems really interesting!
Some of them are edible. But I haven't found many of them, and I have planned to eat other stuff on that day anyway, so I left them there after photographing them.
These are a lot of mushrooms mate😂😂
Nice pictures though 😍
I gifted $PIZZA slices here:
idksamad78699 tipped borjan (x1)
jlinaresp tipped borjan (x1)
@hoosie(6/15) tipped @borjan (x1)
Learn more at https://hive.pizza!