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Pynchon
Slow Learner
Registered: 04/28/01
Posts: 578
Loc: New Zealand
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Re: Unusual Psilocybe species! [Re: Drewwyann]
#8695401 - 07/28/08 11:53 PM (15 years, 7 months ago) |
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Quote:
Drewwyann said:
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Pynchon said: sorry, no camera or phone I have the mushrooms frozen so I can probably still get decent pics if I borrow one but I'm sure they're the same mushrooms as inskis
Why in the name of Mike Tyson would you freeze a psilocybe?!?! D:
they were frozen simply because if I had dried them it would be that much harder to see their "uniqueness" and I'm interested in whether or not any of my shroomer friends have found them before
I'll sort some photos out soonish if people are interested
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Brainiac
Rogue Scientist
Registered: 04/29/06
Posts: 13,259
Loc: 與您的女朋
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Re: Unusual Psilocybe species! [Re: Pynchon]
#8695413 - 07/28/08 11:57 PM (15 years, 7 months ago) |
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Quote:
Pynchon said:
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Drewwyann said:
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Pynchon said: sorry, no camera or phone I have the mushrooms frozen so I can probably still get decent pics if I borrow one but I'm sure they're the same mushrooms as inskis
Why in the name of Mike Tyson would you freeze a psilocybe?!?! D:
they were frozen simply because if I had dried them it would be that much harder to see their "uniqueness" and I'm interested in whether or not any of my shroomer friends have found them before
Photos, where made for that...
-------------------- Fair is Fair
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fungome
Stranger
Registered: 08/14/08
Posts: 1
Last seen: 14 years, 2 months
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Re: Unusual Psilocybe species! [Re: Brainiac]
#8775661 - 08/14/08 11:50 PM (15 years, 7 months ago) |
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I've found quite a bit of the same mushroom in the North Shore (Auckland, NZ). Growing in wood chips under Phormium (native flax). Macroscopically, looks exactly the same as Inski's. Overlooked it at first, as it looked like an unusual Coprinus micaceus or similar (we've had a lot of rain for the past 2 months...). Its come up continuously for 1 month now in the same spots. Similar to Inski's description - solitary to cepitose, with tenacious rhizomorphs. Seems to be partially secotoid in form. While it does open, the gills are quite malformed, and the cap tissue seems to grow down into them. Also, dunno if you found this, Inski, but while I could get spores, the few that made them didn't make many at all. Doesn't mean too much, but... Probably the most distinctive part is the stipe - it seems reduced to me, both in length and width for the size of the cap, and is also very wiry and fibrous. So seems to be something early on the road to secotoid form. I've posted a poor pic - my tripod broke (DON'T buy Gitzo).
Would be nice to know exactly what it is.
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jacksirius
Spatial analyst
Registered: 06/08/09
Posts: 71
Loc: northern nz
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Re: Unusual Psilocybe species! [Re: Pynchon]
#11318983 - 10/25/09 02:50 PM (14 years, 4 months ago) |
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thought id post some of my pics up here also, these mushrooms are the same species as what inski has found, would you believe it.
these are still producing in the wild even, but not like these ones
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whoever
Stranger
Registered: 08/28/09
Posts: 413
Last seen: 6 years, 10 months
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Quote:
Alan Rockefeller said: Anyone up for some data entry?
pandashroom is http://www.shroomery.org/forums/showflat.php/Number/11282377
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centipede
Stranger
Registered: 07/02/10
Posts: 1
Last seen: 13 years, 2 months
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Re: Unusual Psilocybe species! [Re: inski]
#12838322 - 07/02/10 02:46 AM (13 years, 8 months ago) |
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found this or something very similar in otago
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nooneman
Registered: 04/24/09
Posts: 14,664
Loc: Utah
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Re: Unusual Psilocybe species! [Re: centipede]
#12838433 - 07/02/10 03:43 AM (13 years, 8 months ago) |
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Quote:
centipede said: found this or something very similar in otago
Pretty old thread, dude. But still, fascinating find, good work. Also, I feel compelled to point out that Psilocybe Cubensis is STILL Psilocybe Cubensis, two years later...
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HerbBaker
Registered: 08/17/07
Posts: 2,506
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Re: Unusual Psilocybe species! [Re: CureCat]
#12838453 - 07/02/10 03:53 AM (13 years, 8 months ago) |
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Indeed it is.
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Stopwhispering
The voodoo peoples
Registered: 05/01/10
Posts: 4,390
Loc: Melbourne
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Re: Unusual Psilocybe species! [Re: HerbBaker]
#12838568 - 07/02/10 05:36 AM (13 years, 8 months ago) |
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I am wrapped this got such a random bump I would never have seen it otherwise, and it made for some awesome reading.
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trippwner
Stranger
Registered: 06/02/10
Posts: 25
Last seen: 13 years, 7 months
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A mate and i found a patch of these, about 40-60 or so in wood chips in the Dandenong area in Victoria, Australia. overlooked them at first thinking they weren't subs, but my mates curiosity lead him to them and to our surprise they looked exactly like Subs so we picked em. They were massive, thick caps diameter around 8-9cm on one, the rest around 6-7cm, dark and rich in colour, white as steam, bruising instantly. Didnt think they were this big!
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meat_master_king
Stranger
Registered: 08/06/07
Posts: 34
Loc: Tacoma, Washington
Last seen: 2 years, 11 months
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Re: Unusual Psilocybe species! [Re: inski]
#23730877 - 10/12/16 11:01 AM (7 years, 5 months ago) |
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According to mycologist Roy Watling of the Royal Botanical Gardens in Edinburgh, Scotland, Psilocybe semilanceata is the type species for the genus psilocybe and all non-active species of psilocybe are being placed in the genus Deconica. The actives are still Psilocybe.
I will soon be posting allen and gartz' Teonanacatl: A Bibliography of Entheogenic Fungi online by the spring. Mr. Allen has authorized the posting of his CD-ROM online, updated with over 200 new articles since 2012 and over 200 new photos.
The bibliography is immense and consists of over 3000 refs to psilocybian and Amanita fungi, 10,000 cross-references to author date citations and articles on magic mushrooms and over 1600 large photo images.
Edited by meat_master_king (10/12/16 11:03 AM)
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inski
Cortinariologist
Registered: 02/28/06
Posts: 5,766
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The information you post regarding P. semilanceata is almost 7 years old.
How is this relevant to my original post?
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