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amanita mushroom i.d. please Options
 
69ron
#21 Posted : 12/4/2008 8:21:03 PM

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There are quite a bit of other mushrooms with red caps.

You don't ID by color. You ID by all the features of a mushroom: color, texture, cap shape, stem type, spore print, etc. Everything needs to match.

Panthers have dots on the top. The cap it often brown, but sometimes its bleached by the sun and nearly white or yellow, but still a panther. You can tell because of the stem type. No mushroom has dots on top, is the size of the panther, and has the same type of stem.

For example, look at this:



This is NOT the panther. How do I know? Some panthers are this color, and they don't all have dots on top. I know this is not the panther because the stem is not a panther stem. This is Amanita crenulata.

Look here:



No, it’s not A. muscaria. It’s A. parcivolvata. Muscaria isn’t the only red capped mushroom with dots on it!

Another red capped mushroom that isn't muscaria. It almost looks like it has a few white dots on the top, but doesn't really. They are just imperfect areas on the cap.



What about this:



Is this one A. muscaria? No, it's not A. muscaria. Anyone know what it is? I know. Try to guess.
You may remember me as 69Ron. I was suspended years ago for selling bunk products under false pretenses. I try to sneak back from time to time under different names, but unfortunately, the moderators of the DMT-Nexus are infinitely smarter than I am.

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magic clown
#22 Posted : 12/4/2008 8:45:09 PM

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Season and location are two very important determinant factors missed from your list. I am pretty good about mushrooms. I know many of the shrooms in the woods and fields round where I live. I totally know all about the shrooms of interest both magical and edible. I am the only living person that I know, who has found and eaten Wakefield Caps.

I never considered Spocksbrain not being in the UK.
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Entropymancer
#23 Posted : 12/4/2008 8:54:28 PM

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Is that another parcivolvata, Ron?

I'm only familiar with American look-alikes, but parcivolvata is the only one with that striking red color and white dots, and the shape of the young cap and color of the stipe jibe with that identification.
 
Entropymancer
#24 Posted : 12/4/2008 8:59:58 PM

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magic clown wrote:
So I had another good look at the Spocksbrain's photos. I then googled images of Panthers and Frostianas. After some further reading and research, allied with what I allready know about shrooms, I am slightly perturbed to say I agree with Entropymancer's identification.


Peturbed, because every time I see a mushroom exactly resembleing Spocksbrain's, I pick it and eat it. I live in Northern UK, I dont find these shrooms very common. They are something of a notable find for me, I know exactly that I have eaten five of them. I have two sat in my freazer right now. I live in a place where Frostianas are not known to grow but my Panthers are never as dark as the ones on the google images.

If Spocksbrain were to offer me his shroom, I would, even after this ID curiousness still have no quarms about eating it.


You need to familiarize yourself with the identifying characteristics of A muscaria and A pantherina. The stipe, and especially the base of the stipe on Spock's mushroom don't look anything like the base and stipe of muscarias or panthers. This should have jumped out at you.

And never eat an Amanita if you're not 110% sure of your ID. This can be very dangerous, as burnt and polytrip pointed out.

Did the mushrooms that you ate really look exactly like this? With no rolled volval collar or concentric rings on the base, and a high (or absent) annulus?
 
69ron
#25 Posted : 12/4/2008 9:05:03 PM

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Yes. You are right. That was another A. parcivolvata.

I put that up because I wanted people to think a little more about mushroom picking. Even the famous Amanita muscaria which some claim has no look a likes, actually does, which could fool some inexperienced mushroom hunters. If you went out looking for a red cap with dots, there are quite a few different kinds of mushrooms that match those ID features. You need to look at the entire feature set, not just the cap, or color, or size. All the details need to be looked at. But once you get the hang of it, it is easy, at least for me, it is. For me none of these mushrooms look at all the same. For me, no mushrooms look like A. muscaria or A. pantherina. They are unique and easy to identify by their entire feature set.

If a mushroom kind of looks like muscaria but you are not sure, DO NOT EAT IT. You need to be 100% sure of its identification before eating it.

The same holds true for fruit. Some berries can kill you if you eat as little as two or three.
You may remember me as 69Ron. I was suspended years ago for selling bunk products under false pretenses. I try to sneak back from time to time under different names, but unfortunately, the moderators of the DMT-Nexus are infinitely smarter than I am.

If you see me at the waterpark, please say hello. I'll be the delusional 50 something in the American flag Speedo, oiling up his monster guns while responding to imaginary requests for selfies from invisible teenage girls.
 
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