OK wait so you're supposed to leave the stem butt in the ground for all chanties? i've seen patches that i return to repeatedly, and i have seen mushrooms popping back out of places where' i've removed the stem butt, so i always though it was best to remove the entire butt to allow the next generation to sprout direct from the mycellium. (i re-cover the holes with the surrounding moss always)
I love Chantarelles to me one of the finest tasting mushrooms in my opinion. WOW what a patch to find, I have found these in Norther Ontario but not in this quantity.
I like how Paul is narrating his actions and is informative every step of the way. Looking forward to picking Chanterelles here on the David Douglas mountain range in Oregon.
They sure do look goregous!! Every year I pick the "Chanty's" here in British Columbia, and my friends love coming over for homemade mushroom soup! Picking season is just around the corner!!!
@MiroJB Yeah it is great. Ive picked Chantys on the entire Sunshine Coast, from Langdale all the way to Lund. Texada Island is also a great place to pick and they offer free camping at some of their provincial parks, or you can just camp out as the island has no predators (Cougars and bears!) So one can feel safe while mushroom picking. Many Many other spieces grow on the coast, I once saw a 400 pound Lobster mushroom flush near Powell River one year!
That's great! I've actually spread some chanterelles around under my old-growth white oak with the hopes that in the next generation, someone will have a nice surprise when a nice patch appears. Anything would be better than the rather active colony of Boletus Subvelutipes I have popping up this year!
OK wait so you're supposed to leave the stem butt in the ground for all chanties? i've seen patches that i return to repeatedly, and i have seen mushrooms popping back out of places where' i've removed the stem butt, so i always though it was best to remove the entire butt to allow the next generation to sprout direct from the mycellium. (i re-cover the holes with the surrounding moss always)
please clarify Paul!
rhettnyedotorg 1 year ago
I love Chantarelles to me one of the finest tasting mushrooms in my opinion. WOW what a patch to find, I have found these in Norther Ontario but not in this quantity.
nervouss 1 year ago
I like how Paul is narrating his actions and is informative every step of the way. Looking forward to picking Chanterelles here on the David Douglas mountain range in Oregon.
OregonCoastGhost 1 year ago
They sure do look goregous!! Every year I pick the "Chanty's" here in British Columbia, and my friends love coming over for homemade mushroom soup! Picking season is just around the corner!!!
mcnowski 1 year ago
@mcnowski That is awesome. May I ask where in BC you pick? I'm in the lower mainland and just getting into mushroom foraging. Many thanks.
MiroJB 1 year ago
@MiroJB Yeah it is great. Ive picked Chantys on the entire Sunshine Coast, from Langdale all the way to Lund. Texada Island is also a great place to pick and they offer free camping at some of their provincial parks, or you can just camp out as the island has no predators (Cougars and bears!) So one can feel safe while mushroom picking. Many Many other spieces grow on the coast, I once saw a 400 pound Lobster mushroom flush near Powell River one year!
mcnowski 1 year ago
That's great! I've actually spread some chanterelles around under my old-growth white oak with the hopes that in the next generation, someone will have a nice surprise when a nice patch appears. Anything would be better than the rather active colony of Boletus Subvelutipes I have popping up this year!
spacecowboy2k 1 year ago