All posts by Steve

Today’s Abbreviated Mushroom Hunt

Since my eldest daughter has come down with a cold, and the rest of us are fighting not to get sick, our planned mushroom hunt after last night’s heavy rain was greatly abbreviated.

Here are the mushrooms of note from our hike:

Witch’s Butter (Tremella mesenterica) growing amongst some unidentified Peniophora.

Very young Oyster Mushrooms (Pleurotus ostreatus) growing from a downed oak tree.

Tomorrow, if we’re feeling up to it, we may be back to pick the rest when they mature. These guys were the so called “true” oysters as their sporeprint came back a very very faint lilac.

We found a *very* pleasant surprise when my wife looked into the standing, hollowed out trunk of the tree the Oysters were growing on and came upon a *perfect* specimen of Hen of the Woods (Grifola frondosa).

There were also two Chicken of the Woods (Laetiporus sulphureus variety) growing in Johnson Park.

The latter one was a second bloom,  growing from a place we harvested earlier in the season.

Also, a number of other types of mushrooms we came across that I do not have pictures of (as I simply haven’t had the time to upload them yet) were a bunch of forest Marasmius, a stick full of Jelly Ears (Auricularia auricula-judae), one Deer Mushroom (Pluteus cervinis) and a half-dozen Meadow Mushrooms (Agaricus campestris). Out of all of those, we only picked the Meadows.

It was all worth it in the end. For dinner we had bacon, rarebit and Chicken of the Woods sandwiches on fresh home-made whole wheat bread.

That meal embodied the taste of Fall for me. 🙂

Peace,
-Steve

Today’s Edibles

Today’s trek through the Helyar Woods and a few other places yielded a few fun culinary specimens.

A tiny Beefsteak Polypore. At this point I think that the literature needs updating. Beefsteaks seem to be naturalized in NJ.

Two good brackets of Chicken of the Woods. One in Helyar from a bigger cluster that was picked over by another mushroom hunter, another exceptionally young bracket from the log by Ryder’s Lane (much more grew, but sadly so did the poison ivy).

Lots of Meadow Mushrooms from a variety of places, including the largest specimen of the year so far.

In the next post I’ll have the inedibles and unidentifieds.

Peace,
-Steve

All above: Fistulina hepatica

All above: Laetiporus sulphureus

All above: Agaricus campestris

The Past Week’s Unidentified Mushrooms

There were lots of them.

Peace,
-Steve

UPDATE Nov 16 2010: Above identified as Daedalea quercina.

UPDATE: Above mushroom identified as Leucocoprinus cepaestipes.

UPDATE: Above mushroom cluster identified as Pleurotus ostreatus. The two brown mushrooms are not.

Another Beefsteak and a Single Chicken

Yesterday on a nature hike through the Livingston Preserve we found *another* Beefsteak Polypore. My Other Half thinks that they might not be so rare in NJ after all, but perhaps it’s more an indication of the odd climate this year.

We also found a *single* lone Chicken of the Woods bracket growing from a stump.

I also forgot to mention the other day finding a huge cache of Corral mushrooms, as well as a Geo Cache when we weren’t looking for one. 🙂

Peace,
-Steve

On a More Sobering Note…

Today I saw my father off to open heart surgery and at 5:30 he came out well.

Now begins the healing process, and I sincerely hope that he gets out of Robert Wood Johnson as swiftly as possible, without a hospital infection, and on the road to recovery.

The hardest part, for him, will be taking things easy for the next 6 months.

The hardest part, for the rest of the family, will be making sure that he’s taking things easy for the next 6 months. 🙂

Peace,
-Steve