Pasture mushrooms
Uploader Comments (georgem21275)
Top Comments
-
From what ive read from Tom volk and Paul stamets, no worries on getting the names perfect.
If either of you know a good site for how to pronounce the latin names correctly please send me a link.
Its interesting to me.
All Comments (21)
-
The mushrooms at 1:17 look like Agaricus Campestris ot the Meadow Mushroom. They are edible but I haven't tried them myself.
-
where can i find shrooms????:)
-
ewww 0:40 look at the top of the stem where it meets the cap...It looks like a shit load of bugs crawling around
-
im viewer 6666 ........... noooooooo
-
Very good vid, very informative. The agaricus is a pink bottom, or pinkies. Same famliy, same taste as the ones in the store.
-
@SuperPoacher777 I live in KS and I have seen Panaeolus cinctulus here, unfortunetly they were growing in my school court yard so I couldent eat them..... but YES they do grow in KS. They dont normally grow in cow or horse poop instead look at newly placed mulch after it rains or mist.
-
and the panaeolus is an antillarum. not good eatin or pschadelic unfortunatly
-
the agaricus is a campestris, or meadow mushroom. Good eatin
-
the rasnius orieads i have growing in my back yard my dad ses its cuz of the tree roots are dieing and stuff but im definatly gnna try them now
-
What ? not even the lat shroom you picked up?? its not psychoactive??
Have you had the chance to find some Psilocybe cubensis around were you live ? In certain fields around where i live they can be extremely prolific.
SuperPoacher777 1 year ago
@SuperPoacher777 I have never seen wild cubensis in Kansas, although I have heard a few reports that collections have been made in the state.
georgem21275 1 year ago
0:01 that mushroom is???
dcjpa403 1 year ago
@dcjpa403 somewhere around Panaeolus papilionaceus.
georgem21275 1 year ago 3
are any of these hallucinogenic?
kushprophet 2 years ago
None of these are, although the mushrooms at the very beginning of the video are from a genus that is home to a few psychoactive species. They aren't terribly common in the region but I do encounter them. Occasionally Panaeolus cinctulus (=P. subbalteatus) can be seen fruiting by the thousands.
georgem21275 2 years ago