I have champignon mushrooms (I believe) in my garden, in a fairy ring. There are loads of them, but, as a novice, I'm scared of picking and eating them. This has helped a little, so thank you.
Great go to channel for info, has really helped my knowledge and confidence come along. Harvested my first chicken of the woods after keeping my eyes out for a decade.. not allergic thankfully.. great stuff. There is a wacking great dryads saddle growing from a h chestnut tree 20 ft from my house. Think I'll leave that one tho.
Cheers Milo,just found a heap of these,I was aware of the Fools funnel danger,did a print,cross referenced in my books and finally got my confirmation from your video ref: gills. Thanks for your time doing these videos mate,I always double check with you even after all my iding protocols😉👍
Thank you for this video. I've been trying to identify mushrooms in my back yard for a few days! They resemble fairy in every way, EXCEPT they mostly have what looks like velvet fuzz growing around the base of their stems. It's very pretty, but curious considering other photos and videos I've seen of fairy ring mushrooms out there. In this video though, your fairy you've picked also has that velvet "hair". Thanks again!
After getting some experience growing mushrooms and seeing how common mutations are, I wonder how common is that a decurrent gills mutates into a free gills one or any other mutation which can make a poisonous mushroom difficult to differentiate . Does it happen often on these or in other type of mushrooms?
I have champignon mushrooms (I believe) in my garden, in a fairy ring. There are loads of them, but, as a novice, I'm scared of picking and eating them. This has helped a little, so thank you.
That's really useful as I know a place where there are lots of rings. Now I will take a closer look
Just picked a fools funnel mushroom and I was looking it up to see if it’s edible thank you for saving my life.
Love these videos 😍
Excellent piece on clarification of the two types. Keep up the good work Marlow!
Thanks for a really useful bit of info. I've only tried fairy ring mushrooms this year. So a timely tip.
Great go to channel for info, has really helped my knowledge and confidence come along. Harvested my first chicken of the woods after keeping my eyes out for a decade.. not allergic thankfully.. great stuff. There is a wacking great dryads saddle growing from a h chestnut tree 20 ft from my house. Think I'll leave that one tho.
Love it mate
Cheers Milo,just found a heap of these,I was aware of the Fools funnel danger,did a print,cross referenced in my books and finally got my confirmation from your video ref: gills.
Thanks for your time doing these videos mate,I always double check with you even after all my iding protocols😉👍
Wow! I wonder why they grow right next to each other like that
Fairy ring champignons are in my top three of fungi to eat, so common to. I need to find lion's mane. I found one but it was tiny.
I think Lions Mane are protected in UK so best to leave them
Thank you for this video. I've been trying to identify mushrooms in my back yard for a few days! They resemble fairy in every way, EXCEPT they mostly have what looks like velvet fuzz growing around the base of their stems. It's very pretty, but curious considering other photos and videos I've seen of fairy ring mushrooms out there.
In this video though, your fairy you've picked also has that velvet "hair". Thanks again!
After getting some experience growing mushrooms and seeing how common mutations are, I wonder how common is that a decurrent gills mutates into a free gills one or any other mutation which can make a poisonous mushroom difficult to differentiate . Does it happen often on these or in other type of mushrooms?
Good speculation, i think anything is possible in nature, but i do think itll be rare in our lifetime to occur
Are they the only mushrooms that grow in fairy rings?
I thought the title said fool’s funeral
Dude, sort your 'piece' out. It's flapping around like a wrap-over. lolz.
haha