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Frizzie
Muskiebanger



Registered: 12/03/11
Posts: 372
Loc: Coral Castle
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Does this appear to anyone to be an Active Pluteus?
#18948155 - 10/08/13 04:34 AM (10 years, 3 months ago) |
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Hey everyone! Its been awhile!,
So this is the first time i've ever brough a pluteous home for examining. When in the woods I noticed three of these growing out of the lowest part of a decaying stump. They had a blueish hughe on the stemns and since I have heard of others from the Shroomery finding them with success I figured I would ask.
I took a spore print and they were beautiful salmon pink btw. Here are the pictures. Took a nibble too and they tasted very acrid like copelandia or panaeolus with a sweet aftertaste.
This is a picture of all our finds. There were some Lactarious Deliciosas (one was "lobstered") and some really neato clear Jelly fungus top left. Very difficult to pull away from base.

And this is from Bellingham, PNW Washington State
Thanks, Frizzie
-------------------- What is this place The Truman Show!...
 
Edited by Frizzie (10/08/13 04:46 AM)
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Joie


Registered: 10/17/09
Posts: 7,301
Loc: UK
Last seen: 1 year, 3 months
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Re: Does this appear to anyone to be an Active Pluteous? [Re: Frizzie]
#18948187 - 10/08/13 05:02 AM (10 years, 3 months ago) |
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Yes, those are P. salicinus. Love the L. deliciosus. I wouldn't eat the Hypomyces one, but since we don't have lobster mushrooms here maybe I'm mistaken.
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Blue-FunGuy
The Bad Pungi


Registered: 03/05/10
Posts: 5,365
Loc: Northeast
Last seen: 8 years, 1 month
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Re: Does this appear to anyone to be an Active Pluteous? [Re: Joie]
#18948398 - 10/08/13 07:06 AM (10 years, 3 months ago) |
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They look more like Entoloma to me,don't eat.The gills look wrong and attatched,Pluteus have free gills. You been drinking Joie?
Edited by Blue-FunGuy (10/08/13 07:19 AM)
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psylosymonreturns
aka Gym Sporrison



Registered: 10/16/09
Posts: 13,948
Loc: Mos Eisley,
Last seen: 3 years, 5 months
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Re: Does this appear to anyone to be an Active Pluteous? [Re: Blue-FunGuy]
#18948523 - 10/08/13 08:09 AM (10 years, 3 months ago) |
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I was thinking Entoloma too.
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Eggtimer
HotSauce Lover

Registered: 05/04/13
Posts: 3,097
Last seen: 3 days, 23 hours
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Re: Does this appear to anyone to be an Active Pluteous? [Re: Frizzie]
#18948538 - 10/08/13 08:19 AM (10 years, 3 months ago) |
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The only actives I was able to find were pluteus. Those don't look right.

-------------------- It's all for the s
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Joie


Registered: 10/17/09
Posts: 7,301
Loc: UK
Last seen: 1 year, 3 months
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Re: Does this appear to anyone to be an Active Pluteous? [Re: Blue-FunGuy]
#18949569 - 10/08/13 01:13 PM (10 years, 3 months ago) |
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Quote:
Blue-FunGuy said: You been drinking Joie?
Tried a couple of A. muscaria the other night and didn't feel it but in the morning my car got towed untaxed and to release it has cost me a lot of literal running around and several hundreds of pounds in bureaucracy grease. Fkn fly agaric. I do find P. salicinus and should know better but I saw what looked like free gills and blue tints in the third shot. My bad.
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Frizzie
Muskiebanger



Registered: 12/03/11
Posts: 372
Loc: Coral Castle
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Re: Does this appear to anyone to be an Active Pluteous? [Re: Joie]
#18949795 - 10/08/13 02:13 PM (10 years, 3 months ago) |
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Ok, great guys thanks for the imput... this is worth further investigation. When I tasted them it was very acrid like I said I could taste the psilo it seemed but of course I spit it out and rinsed.
IT did seem to have slight blueing and pink spores.
Do entoloma have pink spores too?
Thanks again, Frizzie
-------------------- What is this place The Truman Show!...
 
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Blue-FunGuy
The Bad Pungi


Registered: 03/05/10
Posts: 5,365
Loc: Northeast
Last seen: 8 years, 1 month
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Re: Does this appear to anyone to be an Active Pluteous? [Re: Frizzie]
#18949881 - 10/08/13 02:34 PM (10 years, 3 months ago) |
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Yes,Entoloma has pink/salmon colored spores.
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jerseyian
Friend

Registered: 10/19/13
Posts: 1,560
Last seen: 6 years, 10 months
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Re: Does this appear to anyone to be an Active Pluteous? [Re: Blue-FunGuy]
#19029633 - 10/25/13 05:12 AM (10 years, 3 months ago) |
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I think a good indicator that you have pluteous salicinus and not entiloma is that entiloma do grow in small clusters while p. salicinus appear to grow solitary. Am i correct guys?
-------------------- YEP I AM TREE HUGGING HIPPIE Have... several different prints. Want to trade any ethnobotanical seeds? I have lots.
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Eddeee
Observer/messenger



Registered: 10/06/12
Posts: 933
Loc: under the pacific ocean o...
Last seen: 10 years, 11 days
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Re: Does this appear to anyone to be an Active Pluteous? [Re: jerseyian]
#19029659 - 10/25/13 05:30 AM (10 years, 3 months ago) |
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If you in large the last two pics those gill look free to me. The center pics look like that but I think it is the angle. where were they found growing On wood? If on Wood I don't think they are entolomas. I also see blueing and I have found this species quite a few time and it looks very much like the one I find to me.
-------------------- Don't read books study life then write books we are nothing but atoms trying to figure out what atoms are.
Edited by Eddeee (10/25/13 05:36 AM)
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Frizzie
Muskiebanger



Registered: 12/03/11
Posts: 372
Loc: Coral Castle
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Re: Does this appear to anyone to be an Active Pluteous? [Re: Eddeee]
#19069802 - 11/01/13 12:53 PM (10 years, 2 months ago) |
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Thanks guys, been a whiles since I was on. I foud them on decaying wood, not in clusters. Only three or so specimens spread out.
I've long since thrown them and their spores away. I could go back to the area and try to find some more to photograph but I was gathering that the consensus was entoloma so I was not to excited.
Peace. Frizzie
-------------------- What is this place The Truman Show!...
 
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