Home Artists Posts Import Register

Files

Cody finds and eats wild shaggy ink cap mushrooms

Help me make videos by donating here: https://www.patreon.com/CodysLab Follow me on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/codydonreeder SubReddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/codyslab/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/CodysLab

Comments

Anonymous

I look forward to your video analysis.

Anonymous

Dang, that time lapse at the end was intense, brought me back to reading some Marvel comics. If they had taught us about mushrooms like this as a kid it would have stuck. Excellent little knowledge break from work, thanks CodyDon!

Anonymous

Cody, back in the 70's you could make a selective medium for basidiomycetes. 100 ppm penicillin plus 100 ppm Benomyl. Do you know of a modern equivalent seeing as Benomyl is long out of production?

Clifton Ballad

I have pictures for you! I think one of these grows repeatedly in my garage... I'll post them on the community bit of patreon

Anonymous

Was that a Buddy purr at the end?

Cull2ArcaHeresy

if you poke a hole or cut a nic in top while growing (still in ground), would it cause it to start digesting and ruin whole top?

Anonymous

The shaggy you found are probably all the same organism, right

Anonymous

Unique types that in Canada grow in the fall under sumac trees. Cool.

Anonymous

Wow those just completely turn into black goop. That's crazy.

Anonymous

Cool video.

Anonymous

CodyDon, I am unable to tell where you are collecting these mushrooms. Please consider that fungi also act as bioaccumulators of pesticides. Malathion, for example, has been shown to accumulate in fungal materials. If you are collecting these in a public place, you are unlikely to know what has been sprayed on the plants and mulch. You may then be consuming toxins you might prefer to avoid.

Anonymous

Tasty. Not sure why anyone would complain about frying in a little oil and salt.

Anonymous

Nice find, I haven't got those in my area, but we see a lot of oysters, blue oysters (I introduced them into the area (Whoops) they're a non competing species though. And I also found Wood Blewits, Some Boletus Pseudocarpus and the Boletus Bicolor which is a super fun species. Bright red, with bright yellow spongey sporangeophore structures underneath and it stains bright blue when bruised or sliced. And it's edible! Best in soups.

Anonymous

I have a compost bin that has started sprouting, what seems to be, Shaggy ink cap mushrooms.