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brizvegasguy
Stranger
Registered: 02/24/03
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Last seen: 21 years, 10 months
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brisbane, australia.. mushrooms
#1332405 - 02/24/03 04:44 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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Ok now I know y'all want indepth habitat and mushroom descriptions but at the moment i'm about to run to work.. so that will be coming this evening (hopefully have some spore prints too).
Anyway.. these are some mushrooms I've found in my backyard today.. the really heavy rain was starting to mangle them so i transplanted them into these plates.. i don't know what they are and I'm not assuming anything.. so take a look at the gallery and feel free to add any comments..
(remember better descriptions will be up soon)
the images are all hosted with brief descriptions here - http://shrooms.mypicgallery.com/
ta..
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angryshroom
Stranger
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Posts: 7,264
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: brizvegasguy]
#1332488 - 02/24/03 05:11 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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Well, I can see that you have some Coprinus, I think one image shows a species of Marasmius, and possibly the others are Galerinas. All which are NOT recommended to eat !!
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MushyMay
Brian Eno is mypersonal God FNORD
Registered: 02/18/02
Posts: 423
Loc: ACT, Australia
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: brizvegasguy]
#1332490 - 02/24/03 05:12 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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I'd definitely stay away from those unknown footpath mushrooms, they look nasty. Possibly Galerina. The skinny white ones, I know what they are but the name eludes me right now. Not Psilocybe.
-------------------- MushyMay is a fictional character, as a result any information provided by MushyMay is also fictitious.
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angryshroom
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: angryshroom]
#1332493 - 02/24/03 05:13 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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Yes, and your suspected "brown cubes" are no-dout Coprinus... not active!!
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brizvegasguy
Stranger
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: angryshroom]
#1332978 - 02/24/03 11:29 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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damnit.. i figured with the amount variation i was hopefully gonna hit at least one bullseye.. walking to work this arvo (after posting that topic) i came across an utter *&^(* load of mushrooms growing in the mulch at this little creekside park so I picked some on the way home.. that gallery will be up soon as well.. i've already possibly ID'd one species from the poisonous mushrooms post as Hypholoma fasciculare.. anyway there will be better descriptions up and some spore print colours.. so have a look if ya please =D
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brizvegasguy
Stranger
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: brizvegasguy]
#1333021 - 02/25/03 12:16 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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i might also add.. that so far.. none of the approximately 7 species I've found today have stained blue.. i think i'm doing something wrong.. with this awesome rainy weather for the past 2 weeks.. and i can't find anything good..
anyway here's the second gallery..
http://shrooms2.mypicgallery.com/
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mjshroomer
Sage
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Posts: 13,774
Loc: gone with my shrooms
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: brizvegasguy]
#1333218 - 02/25/03 03:16 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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Read John Allen's book at http://www.erowid.org
It is, "Magic Mushrooms of Australia and New Zealand."
Everything in there is in Australia except the Psilocybe cyanescens which Guzman added to my paper by mistake.
mj
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angryshroom
Stranger
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Posts: 7,264
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: brizvegasguy]
#1333723 - 02/25/03 06:50 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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You're not finding anything active because you're looking in your backyard!!
Try going to a cow pasture and looking through the dung. Psilocybe cubensis and Copelandia cyanescens can be found in your neck of the woods during the right time of the year... (I think).
Look for some cow pastures, or some horse stables... You're probably only going to find stuff growing in there.
I dont know your climate...maybe give us a better description of how it is...!
Check out MagicRooms posts here, he is finding some stuff!
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Gumby
Fishnologist
Registered: 06/13/01
Posts: 26,656
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: brizvegasguy]
#1334086 - 02/25/03 08:42 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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I see some Coprinus, Mycenia, Psathyrella(possibly), Agaricus, Lepoita(yellow one), and possibly some Galerinas.
Sorry man, no dice... I wouldn't try eating any of those, all you'll get from them is sick, possibly even dead. Keep searching.
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Zen Peddler
Registered: 06/18/01
Posts: 6,379
Loc: orbit
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: mjshroomer]
#1334375 - 02/25/03 10:02 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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Quite a nice mixture of aussie shrooms there in those pics! If only we had more rain down south! MJ how often do you update that online book? I can confirm that panaeolus cyanescens is found in Victoria Australia and ive had reports of psilocybe cubensis down here as well. Also the dosage for subaeruginosa is a little high - they are damn potent shrooms - 1.4psilocybin .7ish psilocin from law-enforcement funded alkaloid analysis. You could also explain that Ps.Subaeruginosa as found in victoria is Guzman's Australiana.
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mjshroomer
Sage
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: Zen Peddler]
#1334508 - 02/25/03 10:48 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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In order to keep my status as a casual observer of habits, I cannot add anyones personal info until something is published. That validates my research.
I did talk to fire once about adding an update in a seaprate section ffrom the book since my book is based soleluy on my published research.
I know there are a lot of shrooms in different Australian States which tend to overlap other states boundary lines.
Anyway good luck on yoiur hunt.
mjshroom
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Zen Peddler
Registered: 06/18/01
Posts: 6,379
Loc: orbit
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: mjshroomer]
#1334520 - 02/25/03 10:52 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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So what your saying is that your info from that book is based purely on published material? Where was that dosage for subaeruginosa published?
Im not why publshing validates your work, when you consider that much of what is published regarding Australian psychoactive mushrooms is factually incorrect and published outside Australia.
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Edited by Zen Peddler (02/25/03 10:53 AM)
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brizvegasguy
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: angryshroom]
#1334618 - 02/25/03 11:24 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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i was really hoping i'd find some of those nice little ones that grow in wood mulch.. and there was some bagged cow dung out there from an experiment a few months ago which is sprouting pretty madly..
can anyone give me names (or believed names) in relation to what picture thei're looking at.. then i can change the descriptions in the gallerys which may prove useful for other brisbane shroomers? cheers =D
(working on spore printing them all properly now)
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ToxicMan
Bite me, it's fun!
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: brizvegasguy]
#1335817 - 02/25/03 05:17 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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I'll try guesses on a couple of the more distinctive looking ones for you.
From the first gallery, I only see one that is distinctive enough to ID without a more detailed description - #6. It looks like Marasmius siccus.
From the second gallery, #8 & 9 resemble Leucocoprinus birnbaumii.
I could try to guess on others, but they would be pretty wild guesses. You will probably do best if you pick out specific ones you want IDed and make detailed descriptions of them for us to work from.
Hope that was a little help, anyway.
Happy mushrooming!
-------------------- Happy mushrooming!
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angryshroom
Stranger
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: ToxicMan]
#1335827 - 02/25/03 05:22 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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I agree with you on the Marasmius...
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nilobject
nil
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: angryshroom]
#1336446 - 02/26/03 12:26 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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brisvegasguy: hey. another brisbane guy here.
places where i've had luck hunting is on the surrounding mountains. there are alot of cow farms on those hills.
the recent rain has been absolutely perfect and the mushrooms are popping up like, well, mushrooms. by saturday the rain should calm down, so early saturday morning would be a great time to look.
most of the farmers i've run into and pretty cool about it too, so if a guy comes towards you, and he isn't a cop or holding any sort of firearm, then don't run. just explain what you are doing, don't have to be specific, and if they ask you to leave, then go.
happy hunting. show us what you find.
nil
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mjshroomer
Sage
Registered: 07/21/99
Posts: 13,774
Loc: gone with my shrooms
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: Zen Peddler]
#1336878 - 02/26/03 05:04 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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I spent 6 weeks in Australia and collected many specimens which I gave to Guzm?n. If you read the list of acknowledgements I personally contacted, both by mail and by telephoine, many of the people listed in the acknowledgements.
I merely said that Unless it is published it is not valid to the mycological academia.
That is all.
I also said I would work with erowid to make an update if that is what you all want.
Published works are often scrutinized and gone over AND information always changes. Kreigelstreiners paper caused riffes throughout the mycological world but everything in his paper on P. cyanescens and suspected species which he thought were one are not. Much of his work was and is considered invalid by western mycologists.
Gerhaardt does this with Panaeolus. He wants the genus to be Panaeolus witrhout Copelandia, Yet Western mycologists prefer the genus Copelandia.
Paul Stamets for instance added a whole bunmch of Stropharias to the Psilocybe genus but never published a paper so many mycologists do not considered those Stropharias to be Psilocybes.
Take a look at the Southcoot P. subaerugionosa photo at my site. Southcott did the taxonmy on that collection. They too are very different than a lot of the ones I collected in the early 1980s.
Anyway have a shroomy day and as you say yhe debate goes on.
The article is called a Review of Psychoactive Agarics in Australia and new Zealand and was originally published in the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs. AND AS i NOTED WAS A REVI9EW OF THEKNOWN LITERATURE, PLUS NEW INFO AND PHOTOS.
I would also like to point out that Paul Velgalys has already made microscopic identification obsolete with his new 50 page paper on DNA which now reclassifies all of the psilocybian mushrooms into a new genus (Clade) in phylogeny called Psychedlia. Based on DNA examination he has already put many of the genus into the DNA clades classifications. I have the papes on that. Too big to post but I will post the works I have on trhe Psilocybe.
Eventually they will rename the whole genus to Psychedelia .
Imagine, Psychedelia subaeruginosa, Psychedelia semilanceata, etc.
So that removes the word psilocybe. This only is being appliesd to those psilocybes which produce psilocine and/or psilocybine. Of which there are now 190 known species.
Here are a few pages of the paper to bring confusion to an aleready confused genus.
Edited by mjshroomer (02/26/03 05:26 AM)
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mjshroomer
Sage
Registered: 07/21/99
Posts: 13,774
Loc: gone with my shrooms
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: mjshroomer]
#1336935 - 02/26/03 05:35 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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HEre are three pages from the paper,
mj
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mjshroomer
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brizvegasguy
Stranger
Registered: 02/24/03
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: mjshroomer]
#1338131 - 02/26/03 02:02 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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cheers lads.. i'm going to try and get hold of a decent digi-cam to take some better pics and meet up with some local ethno-botanic enthusiasts around my area and hopefully put together a bit of a list/gallery of some common brisbane mushrooms (active and not active) which may help out people like myself who are just trying to identify the types of mushrooms growing in they're area.. and hopefully stop some people from eating bad ones
ok, on a different note.. i went out yesterday and looked around a suburb which has a lot of cows.. i looked in fields and on the sides of the road and all i managed to find where those gallerina looking ones that i seem to be finding everywhere.. and two possible amanitas.
http://shrooms3.mypicgallery.com/
ok, the first ones (the really big ones.. now i've included a bottle cap for sizing help) i found just growing in the grass (possibly there had been some dung there at some stage) under the shade of a tree (sorry i don't know what the tree was).. there were about 8.. the biggest having a cap slightly bigger than a CD. The mushroom is white with a brown patch near the peak of the cap.. it has whitish/very pale green gills and a veil (that's the little ring around the stalk yeh?)
the second was found growing on someones footpath just in the dirt..it is completely white, including the gills. It has no real distinguishing features
ok the third was found about a metre from the second in the dirt as well.. It has a deep orange cap (with some light orange blotches), a white stalk and white gills..
so far i haven't been able to get spores from any of these three..
hopefully i will be able to also borrow a dodgy computer miscroscope for some better spore/gill pics.. anyway.. this is all in it's infancy and the moment and not very well organised.. cheers for bearing with me
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mesq
Psychonaut
Registered: 02/24/02
Posts: 284
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: brizvegasguy]
#1340256 - 02/27/03 09:15 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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So you are coming to the Brisbane meet that I have posted about??
BTW you really need to look in places other than the side of the road... IE big well manured cow paddocks... Roadside might happen for Woodchip loving mushrooms but unless you live in a place like India where cows are allowed free roam you'll have to go to Cow Paddocks....
Anyway this is pretty much irrelevant as I think the Rains have been and gone and its then end of that little spurt.
Edited by mesq (02/27/03 09:23 AM)
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ToxicMan
Bite me, it's fun!
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: brizvegasguy]
#1340708 - 02/27/03 11:55 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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The first mushroom(s) in the new (3rd) gallery are pretty easy. Those are Chlorophyllum molybdites. They grow in lawns all over the world. They are extremely nasty poisnonous. DO NOT EAT. They cause severe acute gastrointestinal distress - that means severe abdominal cramping (pain similar to surgery), nausea, vomiting, and "explosive" (sometimes bloody) diarrhea. I'm not personally exactly sure what explosive diarrhea is, but I'm pretty sure I don't want to find out first hand. The grayish-green color of the gills plus the overall stature of the mushroom like a large Lepiota are characteristic of this species. If you collect large Lepiotas to eat, make sure you get a spore print to eliminate these from your collections.
The second, all white one looks like one of the all white Amanita species, but I can't see enough detail on it to be sure. The Amanitas that resemble that mushroom are among the deadliest mushrooms in the world - again do NOT eat. The deadly Amanitas destroy the liver of their victims, causing death after a couple weeks. If you are severely poisoned by these the treatment consists of a liver transplant. A typical white Amanita species is Amanita verna, also known as a "Death Angel" or "Destroying Angel".
The last, orange one suggests Amanita also. Again, I can't see the details I need to verify that.
To verify the potential Amanitas yourself, look carefully at the base of the stem. Amanitas (mostly) will have a volva which will either look like a cuplike sheath extending up from the base or they may have rings of tissue near the base which are the remains of a similar structure which is brittle. Note that it is very easy to leave the volval tissue behind in the ground when you pick an Amanita. You need to make sure you get the entire base of the mushroom, especially when it might be an Amanita. The base of the stem is vital for accurate identification of most Amanitas.
Hope that was helpful.
Happy mushrooming!
-------------------- Happy mushrooming!
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mjshroomer
Sage
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Posts: 13,774
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: ToxicMan]
#1340815 - 02/27/03 12:52 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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Chlorophyllum molybdites Is the number one cause of most accidental poisonous mushroom ingestions in the state of Florida/ Accoprding to the poison control center of Atlanta, Georgia and Steven Peele.
It is commonly knonw as 'green gills' and 'Morgan's Lepiota.'
mj
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Zen Peddler
Registered: 06/18/01
Posts: 6,379
Loc: orbit
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: mjshroomer]
#1343333 - 02/28/03 03:05 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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'I would also like to point out that Paul Velgalys has already made microscopic identification obsolete with his new 50 page paper on DNA which now reclassifies all of the psilocybian mushrooms into a new genus (Clade) in phylogeny called Psychedlia. ' The plot thickens! This is exactly what the guys im working with are trying to do - isozyme and dna analysis and ofcourse their work will be published. Microscopic identification cannot be relied on anyway, because Guzman's error with Subaeruginosa and pigmented cystidia indicates how easily errors can be made. Your point about published work having more validaty in terms of the credibility of the facts therein has been demonstrated not to be sound. I can quote you numerous documents on Australian psilocybes that are factually incorrect - Stamets and Guzman in particular. CHang and Mills as well as Buchanan are both published and both demonstrate that atleast - Subaeruginosa and Australiana are the same mushroom. My own research has demonstrated this. And I am endevouring for an academic in Australia to publish these findings. Lastly, you seem to be making the point that your dosage recommendation for subaeruginosa is based on personal experience. Have you bioassayed these mushrooms? Thanks again for the info and links - ill pass these on as they are invaluable to the guys conducting these studies. Dont have a copy of Chang and Mills by any chance? Or Guzman's reply? I have mentioned editing the online site simply because I am aware how fastidious you can be with facts.
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Zen Peddler
Registered: 06/18/01
Posts: 6,379
Loc: orbit
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: mjshroomer]
#1343335 - 02/28/03 03:08 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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'I merely said that Unless it is published it is not valid to the mycological academia. ' But like you said, just because its published does not make it valid. When ive spoken to academics and pointed out names like Stamets they always smile.
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mjshroomer
Sage
Registered: 07/21/99
Posts: 13,774
Loc: gone with my shrooms
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: Zen Peddler]
#1343405 - 02/28/03 03:46 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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I have eaten what I beli9eved were P. subaeruginosa three times. I also was fortunate to be turned on to by a doctor friend of mine whom I cannot name to P. aucklandii, Anyway,
YEs many books have errors in them intheir research which is incorect. Good examples are the books which list certain species as pois0onous/hallucinogenic, by relying on older books befo9re their books for the data. panaeolina foenisecii, Panaeolus sphinctrinus, Psilocybe coprophila, etc.
Even High TImes had an article by Lynn and Jucy Osbourne (written under the pseudonym of Brolyn) wrote a phony article fopr High TImes called americas Home Harvest Mushroom. with photos of a mutated Panaeolina foenisecii.
I confronted them and they told me their article was truthful and factual on information ferom their friends.
However the article is complete BS>
Later, Still looking for Cleland;'s water color of the subaeruginosa he drew.
mj
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Zen Peddler
Registered: 06/18/01
Posts: 6,379
Loc: orbit
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: mjshroomer]
#1343418 - 02/28/03 03:54 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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Interesting stuff. Still trying to cultivate aucklandii for a looksee. Do you happen to have a copy of Chang and Mills?
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knee_grow
Stoner
Registered: 02/24/03
Posts: 23
Loc: brisbane, australia
Last seen: 1 year, 5 months
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: brizvegasguy]
#1343475 - 02/28/03 04:15 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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i'm in bris, and i've found bucketloads of cubies and cyanescens in the alst week.. check my posts
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Anonymous
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: mjshroomer]
#1343490 - 02/28/03 04:23 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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- Post History Deleted Upon User's Request -
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ToxicMan
Bite me, it's fun!
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: ]
#1343664 - 02/28/03 06:11 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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I agree with you, and wrote an editorial for the Colorado Mycological Society on that topic, concluding with what I considered a dire prediction - I hope that the day doesn't arrive when the only way we can say for sure what kind of mushroom it is will be to take a DNA sample and compare it to a database. Papers like this one are just the sort of thing that makes me think that maybe that day is closer than I thought.
The universities aren't producing PhD mycologists anymore - at least not nearly enough to replace those who are retiring. When Dr. Orson Miller, Jr retired, he was replaced with a molecular biologist. If this trend continues, in 20 or 30 years if they need a fresh specimen of some species of mushroom they'll have to come to people like us to get one, because there won't be enough professional mycologists around to do that sort of work.
I think that at least some of the work the molecular biologists are doing is great - how else are we going to figure out that those 3 species are actually only one species, or that this species should be split into 8? Some of the genera weren't put together very well, and they help fix that mess, too.
I just can't not worry that, in the end, they'll twist things around to the point where you can't "accurately" identify a mushroom just by looking at it - not even with a microscope and chemical reagents.
I sure hope I'm wrong about that.
Happy mushrooming!
-------------------- Happy mushrooming!
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Zen Peddler
Registered: 06/18/01
Posts: 6,379
Loc: orbit
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: ]
#1344094 - 02/28/03 10:13 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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Sure, in most cases i can see your point. But with some psilocybes there has been delineation purely on minute differences in the size/shape of cystidia, and I dont think this really serves any purpose.
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Anonymous
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: ToxicMan]
#1344170 - 03/01/03 12:04 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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- Post History Deleted Upon User's Request -
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Anonymous
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: Zen Peddler]
#1344172 - 03/01/03 12:08 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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- Post History Deleted Upon User's Request -
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blaze2
The Witness
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: ]
#1345530 - 03/01/03 05:28 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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i think that you are right mr mushrooms. being that i have not yet started college what classes would i have to take to become a professional myciologist? i enjoy outdoors and i havent found a single active mushroom but i enjoy just looking at all the other ones i come across. also if i was to major in myciology what kind of jobs would i have to choose from. i mean do people get paid to walk around and find and identify mushrooms? so i guess thats all my ?s for now. peace
blaze2
-------------------- "Religion without science is blind, Science without religion is lame." Albert Einstein
"peace is not maintained through force it is acheived through intelligence." Albert Einstein
"Those who desire to give up Freedom in order to gain Security, will not have, nor do they deserve, either one."
Thomas Jefferson
"To compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he disbelieves and abhors, is sinful and tyrannical." --Thomas Jefferson
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Anonymous
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: blaze2]
#1347088 - 03/02/03 02:11 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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- Post History Deleted Upon User's Request -
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blaze2
The Witness
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: ]
#1347196 - 03/02/03 02:54 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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that sounds good so is there an online directory of clubs or should i just call the university and see if they know of any local clubs? i wouldnt really like writing papers but i could see myself doing some of the other examples u gave. thanks for your hlep Mr. Mushrooms. peace
blaze2
-------------------- "Religion without science is blind, Science without religion is lame." Albert Einstein
"peace is not maintained through force it is acheived through intelligence." Albert Einstein
"Those who desire to give up Freedom in order to gain Security, will not have, nor do they deserve, either one."
Thomas Jefferson
"To compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he disbelieves and abhors, is sinful and tyrannical." --Thomas Jefferson
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Hongosmeester
old sourdough
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Loc: East Bay (EAST BAY GREASE...
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: blaze2]
#1347534 - 03/02/03 06:02 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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Quote:
that sounds good so is there an online directory of clubs or should i just call the university and see if they know of any local clubs? i wouldnt really like writing papers but i could see myself doing some of the other examples u gave. thanks for your hlep Mr. Mushrooms. peace
blaze2
mycological societies are cool. I met some fellow psyconauts at a local meeting. Try a search engine for mycological societies in your area
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Anonymous
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: blaze2]
#1348032 - 03/03/03 03:17 AM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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- Post History Deleted Upon User's Request -
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blaze2
The Witness
Registered: 12/20/02
Posts: 1,883
Loc: San Antonio, TX
Last seen: 12 years, 6 months
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Re: brisbane, australia.. mushrooms [Re: ]
#1348555 - 03/03/03 05:43 PM (21 years, 10 months ago) |
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thanks man u didnt have to do that. thats great tho ill definately have to check em out. peace
blaze2
-------------------- "Religion without science is blind, Science without religion is lame." Albert Einstein
"peace is not maintained through force it is acheived through intelligence." Albert Einstein
"Those who desire to give up Freedom in order to gain Security, will not have, nor do they deserve, either one."
Thomas Jefferson
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