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Kaeden123

Registered: 12/15/20
Posts: 121
Loc: Oregon
Last seen: 1 year, 7 months
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Gymnopilus ID Oregon 1
#27138063 - 01/09/21 04:55 PM (3 years, 19 days ago) |
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Habitat: Growing out of Doug Fir stump in clear cut in Oregon Coast Range.
Gills: Yellow, becoming more rust colored with age
Stem: About 1cm thick, 3-5cm tall. Orange. Fibrous. Hollow.
Cap: 3-6 cm wide. Orange, scales. Irregular shaped( not perfectly circular)
Spore print color: Rust Orange
Bruising: Nothing very noticeable. One small one dried out a bit and it seems as it dried the gills tuned from orange to more greenish?! Weird huh. Last pic shows this, and yes I’m confident they were orange like the others when picked.
Edited by Kaeden123 (01/10/21 08:11 AM)
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MadMuncher
destroy weyerhauser



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Re: Gymnopilus Possible Sapineus ID Oregon [Re: Kaeden123]
#27138794 - 01/09/21 11:44 PM (3 years, 18 days ago) |
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looks like luteofolius-ish. the sapineus are usually on pine
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MadMuncher
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Re: Gymnopilus Possible Sapineus ID Oregon [Re: MadMuncher] 1
#27138795 - 01/09/21 11:45 PM (3 years, 18 days ago) |
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probably thiersii or close. i see green and blue bruising in pics 2 3 4
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Kaeden123

Registered: 12/15/20
Posts: 121
Loc: Oregon
Last seen: 1 year, 7 months
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Re: Gymnopilus Possible Sapineus ID Oregon [Re: MadMuncher]
#27139250 - 01/10/21 08:59 AM (3 years, 18 days ago) |
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Quote:
MadMuncher said: probably thiersii or close. i see green and blue bruising in pics 2 3 4
Man that would be cool. However these look nothing like Thiersii I’ve found before. And the darkeneing on the edges of the caps look to my eyes just a darkening of the orange red color, not seeing any green/blue other than the gills of that one. Hopefully we get some more guesses on this! Thanks for your input!
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MadMuncher
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Registered: 10/27/12
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Re: Gymnopilus Possible Sapineus ID Oregon [Re: Kaeden123]
#27139380 - 01/10/21 09:58 AM (3 years, 18 days ago) |
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maybe not nvm i thmink my screens all fd up. if you can get pics of them on the log that would help a lot g. sapineus is distinctive reddish color but they bruise sometimes or maybe its a close relative that does
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Doc9151
Mycologist



Registered: 02/23/17
Posts: 13,753
Loc: Gulf Coast USA
Last seen: 1 year, 6 months
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Re: Gymnopilus Possible Sapineus ID Oregon [Re: MadMuncher]
#27139419 - 01/10/21 10:13 AM (3 years, 18 days ago) |
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GYMNOPILUS THIERSII is what I'm thinking. Sorry about the capital letters, just to lazy to change it RN.
--------------------
  Psilocybe cubensis data collection thread. please help with this project if you hunt wild cubensis. https://www.shroomery.org/forums/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=26513593&page=0&vc=1#26513593
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Kaeden123

Registered: 12/15/20
Posts: 121
Loc: Oregon
Last seen: 1 year, 7 months
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Re: Gymnopilus Possible Sapineus ID Oregon [Re: Doc9151]
#27139568 - 01/10/21 11:26 AM (3 years, 18 days ago) |
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Quote:
Doc9151 said: GYMNOPILUS THIERSII is what I'm thinking. Sorry about the capital letters, just to lazy to change it RN.
Doc, do you know of any unpleasant mushrooms that could be a similar Gymnopilus species, or would it be pretty safe to eat these even if they are not necessarily Thiersii?
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Doc9151
Mycologist



Registered: 02/23/17
Posts: 13,753
Loc: Gulf Coast USA
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Re: Gymnopilus Possible Sapineus ID Oregon [Re: Kaeden123]
#27139915 - 01/10/21 02:08 PM (3 years, 18 days ago) |
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I will defere this question to Alan Rockefeller or someone else with more experience with Western species of Gymnopilus, I honestly don't know.
--------------------
  Psilocybe cubensis data collection thread. please help with this project if you hunt wild cubensis. https://www.shroomery.org/forums/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=26513593&page=0&vc=1#26513593
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Kaeden123

Registered: 12/15/20
Posts: 121
Loc: Oregon
Last seen: 1 year, 7 months
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Re: Gymnopilus Possible Sapineus ID Oregon [Re: Doc9151]
#27139977 - 01/10/21 02:43 PM (3 years, 18 days ago) |
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Quote:
Doc9151 said: I will defere this question to Alan Rockefeller or someone else with more experience with Western species of Gymnopilus, I honestly don't know.
Alrighty, thanks!
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Moria841



Registered: 07/02/18
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Re: Gymnopilus Possible Sapineus ID Oregon [Re: Kaeden123]
#27140005 - 01/10/21 03:01 PM (3 years, 18 days ago) |
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It would be safe to eat these, they are either an active or possibly inactive (if it is true that G. dilepis is inactive) Gymnopilus species, but not poisonous.
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Kaeden123

Registered: 12/15/20
Posts: 121
Loc: Oregon
Last seen: 1 year, 7 months
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Re: Gymnopilus Possible Sapineus ID Oregon [Re: Moria841]
#27140035 - 01/10/21 03:17 PM (3 years, 18 days ago) |
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Quote:
Moria841 said: It would be safe to eat these, they are either an active or possibly inactive (if it is true that G. dilepis is inactive) Gymnopilus species, but not poisonous.
Fantastic. Found some Thiersii that looked way different than this a couple weeks ago and just tried them a couple days ago. They were sure a cool mushroom so I hope these will equate to something as well! Thanks for your input.
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Kaeden123

Registered: 12/15/20
Posts: 121
Loc: Oregon
Last seen: 1 year, 7 months
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Re: Gymnopilus Possible Sapineus ID Oregon [Re: Kaeden123]
#27140080 - 01/10/21 03:46 PM (3 years, 18 days ago) |
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Quote:
MadMuncher said: maybe not nvm i thmink my screens all fd up. if you can get pics of them on the log that would help a lot g. sapineus is distinctive reddish color but they bruise sometimes or maybe its a close relative that does
Sorry yeah I should be better about habitat shots. Does a Douglas Fir not qualify as a pine tree because of its lack of needles? It does look much more like Sapineus pictures I’ve seen rather than Thiersii or Dilepis
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Doc9151
Mycologist



Registered: 02/23/17
Posts: 13,753
Loc: Gulf Coast USA
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Re: Gymnopilus Possible Sapineus ID Oregon [Re: Kaeden123]
#27140222 - 01/10/21 05:18 PM (3 years, 18 days ago) |
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Give yourself 10-14 days between journeys to give your serotonin receptors time to get back to baseline.
--------------------
  Psilocybe cubensis data collection thread. please help with this project if you hunt wild cubensis. https://www.shroomery.org/forums/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=26513593&page=0&vc=1#26513593
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MadMuncher
destroy weyerhauser



Registered: 10/27/12
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Re: Gymnopilus Possible Sapineus ID Oregon [Re: Kaeden123]
#27140251 - 01/10/21 05:32 PM (3 years, 18 days ago) |
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Quote:
Kaeden123 said:
Quote:
MadMuncher said: maybe not nvm i thmink my screens all fd up. if you can get pics of them on the log that would help a lot g. sapineus is distinctive reddish color but they bruise sometimes or maybe its a close relative that does
Sorry yeah I should be better about habitat shots. Does a Douglas Fir not qualify as a pine tree because of its lack of needles? It does look much more like Sapineus pictures I’ve seen rather than Thiersii or Dilepis
dougies are in their own genus they are neither pines nor true firs
ive seen sapineus on them in the lower western coast range
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Kaeden123

Registered: 12/15/20
Posts: 121
Loc: Oregon
Last seen: 1 year, 7 months
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Re: Gymnopilus Possible Sapineus ID Oregon [Re: MadMuncher]
#27140323 - 01/10/21 06:07 PM (3 years, 18 days ago) |
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Quote:
Doc9151 said: Give yourself 10-14 days between journeys to give your serotonin receptors time to get back to baseline.
You got it haha. You’re called Doc for a reason huh? Putting these in the reserves, not even too sure they’re psychoactive at this point, especially the amount I’ve got.Quote:
MadMuncher said:
dougies are in their own genus they are neither pines nor true firs
ive seen sapineus on them in the lower western coast range
I thought I had heard that before, thanks for clarifying! And ok, these were found on the east side of the coast range around 1500 ft elevation in a clear cut. Do they look at all similar to the specimens you found?
Edited by Kaeden123 (01/10/21 06:09 PM)
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Doc9151
Mycologist



Registered: 02/23/17
Posts: 13,753
Loc: Gulf Coast USA
Last seen: 1 year, 6 months
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Re: Gymnopilus Possible Sapineus ID Oregon [Re: MadMuncher]
#27142010 - 01/11/21 01:05 PM (3 years, 17 days ago) |
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Quote:
MadMuncher said:
Quote:
Kaeden123 said:
Quote:
MadMuncher said: maybe not nvm i thmink my screens all fd up. if you can get pics of them on the log that would help a lot g. sapineus is distinctive reddish color but they bruise sometimes or maybe its a close relative that does
Sorry yeah I should be better about habitat shots. Does a Douglas Fir not qualify as a pine tree because of its lack of needles? It does look much more like Sapineus pictures I’ve seen rather than Thiersii or Dilepis
dougies are in their own genus they are neither pines nor true firs
ive seen sapineus on them in the lower western coast range
Sapineus will grow on any Conifer.
--------------------
  Psilocybe cubensis data collection thread. please help with this project if you hunt wild cubensis. https://www.shroomery.org/forums/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=26513593&page=0&vc=1#26513593
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