You aren’t like the other foragers that I’ve watched here, most of them will take mostly what they’ve found and won’t leave anything behind for other foragers. You care for our mother nature that’s why you are so abundantly bless, keep it up!
Hi, Adam! Your videos are all at the top of my playing list. I love the little blip with the "Tick Interruption", please show the best way to get rid of them, flick them off, avoid them, protect from them, . . . natural and unnatural solutions (what ever you know can work for us). Us foragers need to stick together. You as always: inspire, and inform us, from the midst of the woods, we, who may be sitting on the edge of this spectacular wild paradise that we call our forests. (We might just be sitting on the edge, because of those, could be, Lyme carrying ticks, hidden spiders and stealthy snakes.)
Been a while, glad to see you posting. I share your videos to those who need help identifying, probably the most informative videos out there. Keep up the great work. And thank you
I would like to formally thank you for your identification guides, I live in Scotland but many of the fungi found in the Americas are also found here in the UK or a similar variety. My dog has either a benign hemangioma or hemangiosarcoma of the spleen, I feed him shiitake mushrooms that can be bought in most large stores but I also forage for anti-tumor/cancer mushrooms such as wood ears and turkey tails for him. He was diagnosed with the tumor over a year ago and is still going strong at age 14.
We still call 'em Jews ears in the ''British'' Isles dont we? ;) Auricularia auriculi judae, I must have harvested a good 2kg of those last year around London. I like to mix chestnuts, shiitake and buttons and make a nice mushroom soup which I got off of ''titlis busy kitchen'' YT channel, most of it ends up in the freezer of course but its great to stock up on, have you thought of growing mushrooms on logs in your garden?
BushmanAOD I would if I had a garden but I live in an apartment, but I have inoculated several logs and trees with lions mane and two oyster types in a local woodland.
@@sheogorathdaedricprinceofm320 cool! I've done the same quite a few times, I have multiple logs in my rental garden at the moment, I'm following the sepp holzer method of burying the logs about 1/3rd deep so they such up the moisture naturally Cheers
@@sheogorathdaedricprinceofm320 haha was just wondering if you were being careful with all that ''anti semitism'' BS going around on mainstream news these days :)
Your content is ridiculously detailed and informative; the videography is excellent to boot. I often re-watch your videos as its so information dense. Thank you for taking the time and effort to produce this high quality work to share with the rest of us.
I've been seeing whitish, golden yellow and black M diminutiva under elm, poplar and pignut hickory. The blacks with gray ridges were a surprise. They were at the base of a live elm but the Pignut was within toppling distance.
You're a good steward of the land. I'm glad I happened upon your page. So informative and quite possibly the most polite young man on the internet. Big fan.
I unashamedly SO look forward to your videos! I’m very glad we’re now entering a spell of months where we can hopefully look forward to more of your work, the best resource on the net.
I was a teacher for 34 years so really appreciate your excellent teaching. You are amazingly knowledgeable and your enthusiasm is infectious. Thank you.
Adam, I really liked this video: you did your usual technical stuff, but also explained and demonstrated cooking methods, and took us with you on a fun search. Thanks for all you do!
Thanks again Adam for another Great video! I look forward to when you post new videos, especially since your so close to me. I've been teaching my 8 yo son to forage for fungi. He loves your videos also.
Love those shrooooom's.....! We have 2 more hunts planned to our annual northern spot. 800 acres of beauty. I cant wait. We usually find 3 or 4 sacks full... And yes,, I agree whole heartedly,, Leave some behind. Grandma always said to keep your spots good, leave the small ones and dry ones plus carry a mesh bag.. Not sure if its true or not but that's what we have always done. Seems to work for us. Happy hunting everyone.
I love deer mushrooms! I slice them pretty thin and throw them in a skillet with oil and some rosemary. If you let them get crispy, they taste like French fries!
Thanks for the video Adam, I enjoyed it very much your videos are the best ,they are very well presented and very informative and in layman's terms to where a dummy like me can understand and learn so thank you very much for all you do , all the best from Western Kentucky .
Great finds! I'm start my morel hunt in central Illinois and work my way up to central Wisconsin. I will be hunting in southeast Wisconsin this weekend and I'm looking forward to a great harvest. If nothing else, just the hike in the woods is great therapy! Have a great weekend!
Great reassurance thanks Adam! Its always helpful to see what is popping up in eastern Pennsylvania to gauge what will arrive here in Connecticut two weeks later. I noticed that Morchellas as a whole arrive two weeks later than usual this year and last year, perhaps that is the new norm
adam i have watched so many of your videos and u have not aged. yes ur hair has gone through some ‘dos but i think you are the perfect example of the health benefits of mushrooms and foraged foods!!
You are such an awesome guy brother! I have been exploring quite a lot lately due to my interest in bushcraft / survival and hence have found many great places to forage and find fungi and other edibles ... here in the UK we have had a ''wet season drought'' in that it is usually our wettest season in April but we only had real hard showers this last weekend! So I should be heading out very soon. I have an awesome ancient woodland which I wild camp in often and basically almost no one goes in there at all!! I know forsure it will be a great fungi harvest there ... Thanks again man, cant wait to take a proper good look at your channel
Excellent video as always Adam, your enthusiasm is only exceeded by your knowledge. I signed up for your coarse on Monday of this week and really into all the new information I have seen so far. Perfect 👌
“It’s like a treasure hunt”. Yes! I get the same feeling mushroom hunting when I find some that I do when I win gambling. It’s just my most favorite activity. It’s so exciting.
Thanks so much for the videos Adam. If I didn't live about a 1000miles away, I'd take your courses for sure. You've really helped to awaken a knowledge to see our natural environment as something much more friendly.
I was talking about the course he does, or did, actually taking people out in the forest for walks. I know about the online course, but I've been out of work for a while, and will be starting again next week, so now isn't the time to buy an online course
Your videos have been so helpful to me. I finally found (April 2021) a patch of the yellow morel here in Oklahoma, after watching your video "6 reasons you can't find morel mushrooms." I found mine in an area of downy oaks.
Your videos are amazing! You are blessed to be so close to these beautiful forests, unfortunately I live in Arizona and the only forests are very far from where I live
South Eastern end of the keystone state here. Glad you pointed out the ticks, mate. Had to have a fully gorged deer tick removed from the back side of my knee cap a couple days ago at the quick care and get my dose of meds. I religiously check every time I go out, but those little buggers are hard to spot sometimes in hard to see places. Great finds in your video. Super stoked for the courses as well. Can't wait to learn more. Truly, much appreciated.
I've got some great woods here ( Northern Kentucky) searching frequently. Thanks for all your advice. I've got a great puffball recipe too btw. Just garlic, butter, ( in a cast iron skillet, ) a little salt and pepper, really good. 👍
Bumper crop of morels for me this year. Found a few hundred on my first forage and literally left many more hundreds behind because they were too small. Will go back in a couple days and really load up.
Whenever I find a morel, I stop and slowly scan every future prospective foot placement, so when I see you go crunch, crunch, crunch, crunch, crunch, my heart sinks...lol It never ceases to amaze me how obscurely camouflaged morels are until you find that first one, then the eyes adapt and I seem to see them everywhere! I found hundreds of half free morels that have been strictly under hickory stands. I never used to look for hickories while morel hunting, but I do now. The half frees cook down to almost nothing though, so a few hundred only amounts to sides in a couple of family meals. Doxycycline is effective if one of those little blood suckers gives you lyme disease, but if the spirochette bacteria colonize in the less circulated areas of the body, then grapefruit seed extract, cat's claw, food grade H2O2, and apple cider vinegar is a very effective combination to rid the body of it. I suffered for 6 years with lyme and it took 8 months to get rid of it. Thanks for sharing👍🏼
Last time out, I found the M. diminutiva in a patch of about two dozen in an area I'd already scoured once, on the way back to where we parked. The little buggers hide pretty well. I also found my first Pycnoporus cinnabarinus, too. That one was easy to spot. Like every day, it was a good day to be in the woods. 👍
I found my first morels this year, during the first foray of my local mushroom club! they haven't been seen in the area in years and they were right along the drip line of a tulip tree.
Morels were 3 weeks late by me (North Chicago burb near the lake). I found my first 2 May 8th, then the next day found over 60. Usually they start late April but it's been unusually cold this spring.
Finally, I found morels. I looked all last spring. This spring I stumbled upon them while going from one apiary to another. I just looked to the side and there they were. It was my first time eating morels and now I know why people hunt for them.
Working through your back catalog of videos, you have some incredible lands you forage on! This starting up here in a few weeks will only be my 2nd season foraging wild fungi, and I haven't seen any forests nearly as nice as the places you film. I'm not far from you, relatively speaking - in the southern Finger Lakes of NY. We have plenty of state lands but the forests there seem mostly young secondary, as most of NY's state forests were purchased by the state some time in the early to mid 20th century and logged periodically. We really don't have any older forests, let alone old growth, until you get up into the Adirondacks to my knowledge. I often feel like I live in the worst area for fungal diversity
Really enjoyed this. I live below state gamelands in PA and a neighbor brought us a big dish of morels from there, but I have never hunted them myself. They are good on pizza too!
Did you ever try to caramelize the the deer mushrooms to get rid of the radish taste? You talked about it in a previous video. Thanks for another great video.
7:30 what insect is that? I find those on almost every mushroom I encounter SE US. Most recently the county was cutting back brush from the roads and pulled out a tree, right across the street from me, leaving a nice hole. After a few weeks I checked it out and all around the inside of the hole Oysters were just stacked! Absolute feast worthy! As I started to harvest, hundreds of those insects were everywhere in the gills etc. I ended up with only little more than a handful because of those bugs and can't seem to figure out what they are. Any help would be most appreciated since they have thwarted my harvesting numerous times.
Love your vids Adam. Found and ate some pheasant back a week ago. Also found a dozen Half Free Morels and 4 yellow Morels. I made a delicious mushroom Risotto. I also had a tick attach to my leg. Damn those bugs.
Love you so much..... had been watching your videos...... you are so full of knowledge about fungis and so many many other stuff....... very very interesting...... I wish I was living somewhere near wild or forest.... how on earth you pronounce such long difficult names of these mushrooms.....😱. Really really nice content. Love and Hugs from Mumbai, India🇮🇳
“Leave some behind, no matter what you find.”
I like that, and it rhymes.
You aren’t like the other foragers that I’ve watched here, most of them will take mostly what they’ve found and won’t leave anything behind for other foragers. You care for our mother nature that’s why you are so abundantly bless, keep it up!
Adam is absolutely adorable and he seems like such a genuinely sweet and kind person. I love watching his videos!
Yea adams are pretty great, i agree i LOVE Adam Haritan
Hi, Adam! Your videos are all at the top of my playing list. I love the little blip with the "Tick Interruption", please show the best way to get rid of them, flick them off, avoid them, protect from them, . . . natural and unnatural solutions (what ever you know can work for us). Us foragers need to stick together. You as always: inspire, and inform us, from the midst of the woods, we, who may be sitting on the edge of this spectacular wild paradise that we call our forests. (We might just be sitting on the edge, because of those, could be, Lyme carrying ticks, hidden spiders and stealthy snakes.)
YOU'RE SIMPLY THE BEST!! MY FAVE TEACHER OF ALL TIME, since Mrs. Alice Nipper in 3rd Grade! Thank Youuu! :)))
Mrs Alice Nipper sounds Hot !!!
@@johnfryman4428Lmao!!🤣
You are a brilliant light during these dark times!
Been a while, glad to see you posting. I share your videos to those who need help identifying, probably the most informative videos out there. Keep up the great work. And thank you
I would like to formally thank you for your identification guides, I live in Scotland but many of the fungi found in the Americas are also found here in the UK or a similar variety.
My dog has either a benign hemangioma or hemangiosarcoma of the spleen, I feed him shiitake mushrooms that can be bought in most large stores but I also forage for anti-tumor/cancer mushrooms such as wood ears and turkey tails for him. He was diagnosed with the tumor over a year ago and is still going strong at age 14.
We still call 'em Jews ears in the ''British'' Isles dont we? ;)
Auricularia auriculi judae, I must have harvested a good 2kg of those last year around London.
I like to mix chestnuts, shiitake and buttons and make a nice mushroom soup which I got off of ''titlis busy kitchen'' YT channel, most of it ends up in the freezer of course but its great to stock up on, have you thought of growing mushrooms on logs in your garden?
BushmanAOD I would if I had a garden but I live in an apartment, but I have inoculated several logs and trees with lions mane and two oyster types in a local woodland.
And yes I do sometimes refer to them as Jews ears but it's a mistranslation of Judas' ears as they grow on the type of tree he hung himself from.
@@sheogorathdaedricprinceofm320 cool! I've done the same quite a few times, I have multiple logs in my rental garden at the moment, I'm following the sepp holzer method of burying the logs about 1/3rd deep so they such up the moisture naturally
Cheers
@@sheogorathdaedricprinceofm320 haha was just wondering if you were being careful with all that ''anti semitism'' BS going around on mainstream news these days :)
Watching this video in the cold of winter makes me feel so much better for what’s to come this spring in Nebraska! Love your videos Adam!!!!
Thanks, Nathan! I too am looking forward to the spring season.
You've made me SO happy with your knowledge, enthusiasm and ethicacy ----- THANK YOU.
Simply splendid!! I always love seeing you teach! Leaving some of everything you forage as a token of gratitude is great advice! Thank you Adam!
So pleased with the cut to the tick interruption
Love that pic at the end 18:45 - with some little violets to touch of the meal!
Why do I not have any friends like you? I absolutely love watching your videos and finding out new things. So cool!
Your content is ridiculously detailed and informative; the videography is excellent to boot. I often re-watch your videos as its so information dense. Thank you for taking the time and effort to produce this high quality work to share with the rest of us.
I've been seeing whitish, golden yellow and black M diminutiva under elm, poplar and pignut hickory. The blacks with gray ridges were a surprise. They were at the base of a live elm but the Pignut was within toppling distance.
You're a good steward of the land. I'm glad I happened upon your page. So informative and quite possibly the most polite young man on the internet. Big fan.
The dishes you make with the stuff u find are always really pretty
I unashamedly SO look forward to your videos! I’m very glad we’re now entering a spell of months where we can hopefully look forward to more of your work, the best resource on the net.
I've been waiting for this upload! I'm having a great spring, I've found over 80 morels, plus an abundance of pheasant backs.
I was a teacher for 34 years so really appreciate your excellent teaching. You are amazingly knowledgeable and your enthusiasm is infectious. Thank you.
Online course registration for Foraging Wild Mushrooms can be found here: www.foragingwildmushrooms.com/
Great video as always. Thank you. I started the course yesterday and really appreciate all of the work you have put in. You are a trusted resource.
I am sure your an Elf or at least related to them
Looking forward to your next mushroom video! Thank you for posting!
Happy that you found some...your meal looks terrific too~
Adam, I really liked this video: you did your usual technical stuff, but also explained and demonstrated cooking methods, and took us with you on a fun search. Thanks for all you do!
Thanks again Adam for another Great video! I look forward to when you post new videos, especially since your so close to me. I've been teaching my 8 yo son to forage for fungi. He loves your videos also.
Still loving the videos! Thank you for your great knowledge and sharing that.
Love how at the end he says it’s a wonderful year so far in 2019 lol
Love those shrooooom's.....! We have 2 more hunts planned to our annual northern spot. 800 acres of beauty. I cant wait. We usually find 3 or 4 sacks full... And yes,, I agree whole heartedly,, Leave some behind. Grandma always said to keep your spots good, leave the small ones and dry ones plus carry a mesh bag.. Not sure if its true or not but that's what we have always done. Seems to work for us. Happy hunting everyone.
A hike with a friend. How lovely.
I love deer mushrooms! I slice them pretty thin and throw them in a skillet with oil and some rosemary. If you let them get crispy, they taste like French fries!
🙏
That's cool
Splendid - and you have the nicest music.
Another great video Adam, please keep up the great work, I enjoy every topic!
Awesome! I found wood ear, dryads saddle and Reishi on a morning forage this week.
@Jack Mechak Awesome! have you made any interesting dishes with them?
Thanks for the video Adam, I enjoyed it very much your videos are the best ,they are very well presented and very informative and in layman's terms to where a dummy like me can understand and learn so thank you very much for all you do , all the best from Western Kentucky .
Boy, you are amazing. Your knowledge of mushrooms is amazing.
Studying for my edible mushroom certification for PA, these videos are so helpful! Thank you!
Adam, you are a mushroom master. Two days with you would be invaluable! Keep up the great content 🙂
Hi Adam, thank you for another fine video. This is greatly appreciated.
I would also be grabbing the garlic mustard too. It's great
great watching you spring foraging and point taking in being grateful by leaving some behind you're awesome Adam 👍👍👍
Great finds! I'm start my morel hunt in central Illinois and work my way up to central Wisconsin. I will be hunting in southeast Wisconsin this weekend and I'm looking forward to a great harvest. If nothing else, just the hike in the woods is great therapy! Have a great weekend!
Please minimze trampling underfoot. 😉
Great reassurance thanks Adam! Its always helpful to see what is popping up in eastern Pennsylvania to gauge what will arrive here in Connecticut two weeks later. I noticed that Morchellas as a whole arrive two weeks later than usual this year and last year, perhaps that is the new norm
adam i have watched so many of your videos and u have not aged. yes ur hair has gone through some ‘dos but i think you are the perfect example of the health benefits of mushrooms and foraged foods!!
You are such an awesome guy brother! I have been exploring quite a lot lately due to my interest in bushcraft / survival and hence have found many great places to forage and find fungi and other edibles ... here in the UK we have had a ''wet season drought'' in that it is usually our wettest season in April but we only had real hard showers this last weekend! So I should be heading out very soon. I have an awesome ancient woodland which I wild camp in often and basically almost no one goes in there at all!! I know forsure it will be a great fungi harvest there ...
Thanks again man, cant wait to take a proper good look at your channel
Thank you!
Please be careful to minimize trampling under foot.
Excellent video as always Adam, your enthusiasm is only exceeded by your knowledge. I signed up for your coarse on Monday of this week and really into all the new information I have seen so far. Perfect 👌
Id love to see a vid of you an paul stamets out in the washinton state forest. Always like seeing your vids .that meal looked scrumptious. Thank you.
“It’s like a treasure hunt”. Yes! I get the same feeling mushroom hunting when I find some that I do when I win gambling. It’s just my most favorite activity. It’s so exciting.
Thank you so much
Your voice his so soothing
Thanks so much for the videos Adam. If I didn't live about a 1000miles away, I'd take your courses for sure. You've really helped to awaken a knowledge to see our natural environment as something much more friendly.
It's actually an online course. You should check it out.
I was talking about the course he does, or did, actually taking people out in the forest for walks. I know about the online course, but I've been out of work for a while, and will be starting again next week, so now isn't the time to buy an online course
I appreciate all your time working on these videos man
Good job thanks for posting your vids have inspired me to keep hunting thanks allot for sharing great job.
Great video! Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
The morels are coming a bit late in my area of lower Michigan.
I can't hardly wait!!!
Yeah I'm in lower Michigan and I'm still finding them in good condition! Shocking!
Your content is awesome man. I’ve always hunted for morels but now my eyes are open to so many new adventures . Thanks!
Early in this video the peddle s on that one flower looked 🍄 to me. Lovely!
How it was shaped typical mushroom look.
Your videos have been so helpful to me. I finally found (April 2021) a patch of the yellow morel here in Oklahoma, after watching your video "6 reasons you can't find morel mushrooms." I found mine in an area of downy oaks.
Your videos are amazing! You are blessed to be so close to these beautiful forests, unfortunately I live in Arizona and the only forests are very far from where I live
South Eastern end of the keystone state here.
Glad you pointed out the ticks, mate. Had to have a fully gorged deer tick removed from the back side of my knee cap a couple days ago at the quick care and get my dose of meds. I religiously check every time I go out, but those little buggers are hard to spot sometimes in hard to see places.
Great finds in your video. Super stoked for the courses as well. Can't wait to learn more. Truly, much appreciated.
This makes me want to watch every video from your channel.
Just found your channel. Thanks for sharing your knowledge of nature.
Mmmmmm, these look yummy! Thank you for he cooking tips too💜 happy trails
I've got some great woods here ( Northern Kentucky) searching frequently. Thanks for all your advice. I've got a great puffball recipe too btw. Just garlic, butter, ( in a cast iron skillet, ) a little salt and pepper, really good. 👍
Fantastic as always, thanks Adam! Hopefully I will be able to sign up to your new course sometime in the future :)
Bumper crop of morels for me this year. Found a few hundred on my first forage and literally left many more hundreds behind because they were too small. Will go back in a couple days and really load up.
"...thou shalt not covet...."
@@DannaGesellchen "...unless we're talking about morel mushrooms." FTFY
This guy is really good - - extremely knowledgeable and a great explainer/teacher! Thanks. == WCW
WELL DONE with the tick awareness!
Thanks Adam! I just got paid and enrolled in your course. I'm excited to learn but most happy to be supporting you in your awesome effort.
Thanks, Logan!
Whenever I find a morel, I stop and slowly scan every future prospective foot placement, so when I see you go crunch, crunch, crunch, crunch, crunch, my heart sinks...lol
It never ceases to amaze me how obscurely camouflaged morels are until you find that first one, then the eyes adapt and I seem to see them everywhere!
I found hundreds of half free morels that have been strictly under hickory stands. I never used to look for hickories while morel hunting, but I do now. The half frees cook down to almost nothing though, so a few hundred only amounts to sides in a couple of family meals.
Doxycycline is effective if one of those little blood suckers gives you lyme disease, but if the spirochette bacteria colonize in the less circulated areas of the body, then grapefruit seed extract, cat's claw, food grade H2O2, and apple cider vinegar is a very effective combination to rid the body of it. I suffered for 6 years with lyme and it took 8 months to get rid of it.
Thanks for sharing👍🏼
Nice comment post Scott.
I love the sound of a wood thrush
You laughed so much in this video, I loved it ahaha I get so giddy and child like when I’m out mushroom hunting aha
Last time out, I found the M. diminutiva in a patch of about two dozen in an area I'd already scoured once, on the way back to where we parked. The little buggers hide pretty well. I also found my first Pycnoporus cinnabarinus, too. That one was easy to spot.
Like every day, it was a good day to be in the woods. 👍
The Pycnoporus is so beautiful, it's one of my favorites.
Incredibly informative thank you good sir! Well done
Idk, I think it would be pretty damn fun to go into the woods and find every mushroom you’re looking for every single time hahaha
Missed you. Thanks for this timely video, and information for enrolling in in your course.
excellent.
Still didnt found any, but there was some rain last two days..maybe i will these next couple of days. Always nice to watch your videos.
Love the content keep up the great work! You are very knowledgeable it’s crazy! Subscribed
I found my first morels this year, during the first foray of my local mushroom club! they haven't been seen in the area in years and they were right along the drip line of a tulip tree.
Morels were 3 weeks late by me (North Chicago burb near the lake). I found my first 2 May 8th, then the next day found over 60. Usually they start late April but it's been unusually cold this spring.
This makes me feel better because I live in Michigan and I still haven't found anything in the morel category yet this year.
Keep making great video and thank you for sharing great information, I am a mushroom hunter myself all year round 😘
Finally, I found morels. I looked all last spring. This spring I stumbled upon them while going from one apiary to another. I just looked to the side and there they were. It was my first time eating morels and now I know why people hunt for them.
Looks like March is going to last until August here in Miss. Grand Solar Minimum. Love your videos. The music is very nice.
Working through your back catalog of videos, you have some incredible lands you forage on! This starting up here in a few weeks will only be my 2nd season foraging wild fungi, and I haven't seen any forests nearly as nice as the places you film. I'm not far from you, relatively speaking - in the southern Finger Lakes of NY. We have plenty of state lands but the forests there seem mostly young secondary, as most of NY's state forests were purchased by the state some time in the early to mid 20th century and logged periodically. We really don't have any older forests, let alone old growth, until you get up into the Adirondacks to my knowledge. I often feel like I live in the worst area for fungal diversity
Really enjoyed this. I live below state gamelands in PA and a neighbor brought us a big dish of morels from there, but I have never hunted them myself. They are good on pizza too!
Im going Tuesday, were gonna have a couple days of rain in the Sequoia National Forrest
the tick closeups had me stop the vid and shower/scrub...
and i haven't been to the woods yet this year
Did you ever try to caramelize the the deer mushrooms to get rid of the radish taste? You talked about it in a previous video. Thanks for another great video.
Thank you for yet another great video!!! 😊
Awesome vid! Would be awesome to have some sort of "Hunt and Cook" videos. Love to watch!
Morels are my favorite spring mushrooms to find for sure, just something about finding a patch of them is so satisfying to me 🤷♂️😂
Learning more and more. Thanks
I found the rare umbrella polypore and lions mane on the same day a few days back. This season has been great to me so far!
the B-roll and the tick interruption were pretty funny
Great video Adam!
I've been finding morels in Western Pennsylvania for over 2 weeks ago now.
7:30 what insect is that? I find those on almost every mushroom I encounter SE US. Most recently the county was cutting back brush from the roads and pulled out a tree, right across the street from me, leaving a nice hole. After a few weeks I checked it out and all around the inside of the hole Oysters were just stacked! Absolute feast worthy! As I started to harvest, hundreds of those insects were everywhere in the gills etc. I ended up with only little more than a handful because of those bugs and can't seem to figure out what they are. Any help would be most appreciated since they have thwarted my harvesting numerous times.
I've seen them too, no idea, just mushroom bugs. Like little silverfish
Love your vids Adam. Found and ate some pheasant back a week ago. Also found a dozen Half Free Morels and 4 yellow Morels. I made a delicious mushroom Risotto. I also had a tick attach to my leg. Damn those bugs.
Love you so much..... had been watching your videos...... you are so full of knowledge about fungis and so many many other stuff....... very very interesting...... I wish I was living somewhere near wild or forest.... how on earth you pronounce such long difficult names of these mushrooms.....😱.
Really really nice content.
Love and Hugs from Mumbai, India🇮🇳
Could you recommend a few books for the souther fungi explorer? What are the favorite guides that have help your journey?
Come up to Minnesota I will show you around.