so found these today

rory420420

Well-Known Member
What balzac was trying to say is you need a rubbermaid tote about 3x3ish in size..presto..space to grow all the shrooms you want..
I wouldn't eat the shrooms..bad idea..mother nature can be a grimy drug dealer also..just like you can get bunk acid..you can get bunk shrooms..but more often than not,the shrooms will hurt you if they are bunk..please be careful..good luck!
 

dwcannan

Active Member
no its called when you have about 9 tarantulas a savannah monitor 12 scorpions and shit loads of snakes its not idealy the most sterile place to grown shrooms plus tanks take up a lot of room no one in my hose would give a shit if i grew shrooms that and i have children that come over here and get into everything
 

dwcannan

Active Member
lol i know how to grow them i know everything i need to do it i just honestly dont have room with all my roomates kids and all the reptiles i have its just not logical for me to grow shrooms lol
 

canndo

Well-Known Member
It is like this, if he has seen a few cubensis, wild or domesticated, he can't miss them, they are obvious, especially if he IS in florida and the like. Cubensis are one of those more distinct species that are pretty unmistakbable. but if he HAD seen them before, then he wouldn't be posting pics asking what they were. I've never seen grey gilled cubensis, but he says they print brown purple - and they bruise blue, so he has a pretty good chance.


But now you have to worry about ecoli from the crap they were taken from. One is always wise to simply take a nibble when they think they are sure, it won't always help, and it may screw with your trip, but it is a good idea.


There are many many mushrooms that both don't taste good AND are not poisonous. I really don't know how many poisonous ones taste good. I also am quite certain that a kingdom that is just an assortment of very involved organic chemical factories that are capable of producing antibacterials - all the way up to very powerful psychoactives can also come up with some pretty elaborate poisons - imagine.

Beyond EVEN that, there are poisons that only become poisonous in the presence of other chemicals. There is at least one species that is very nice, until you decide you might like a glass of wine with your mushroom soup. - I did that and was rather unpleasntly surprised and very glad I didn't have more than a glass of wine. luckily I knew what I had done (sort of, it's a long story).

There are other mushrooms that are perfectly fine - after being cooked.


And, now here is the most interesting thing of all - Agaracine - is carcinogenic. Now agarcine is contained wthin the agaricus bisporus that you put on your pizza, the common button mushroom is without a doubt carcinogenic, cooked or not.

but, it is always a good practice to do exactly what I said.
 

dwcannan

Active Member
there not really grey their like an off white kinda grey, and from what i read at shroomery the only mushrooms that turn blue when their brused are Cubensis
 

DMTER

Well-Known Member
there not really grey their like an off white kinda grey, and from what i read at shroomery the only mushrooms that turn blue when their brused are Cubensis
Absolutely incorrect.....

While it is a good indication and can be used with other identification methods, there definitely are mushrooms that bruise blue like some boletes bruise blue and many new to the art of foraging will mistake darkening of a bruised mushrooms with blueing....

Just be safe brother....always better safe then sorry....go back to the shroomery and read up my man...you will learn and continue to (shit I am still learning after more then a decade of on and off hunting) best luck and happy hunting
 

dwcannan

Active Member
i mean all i want to know is if you guys think their cubs or not they show all the normal signs of cubs, i dont need to hear about the bacteria and all that stuff i already know all the risks of eating mushrooms from the wild. shit happens it happens lesson learned.
 

canndo

Well-Known Member
If they bruise blue, have a puprple print and are in the American south east, they are what you suspect. BUT. I have never seen a p cubensis in the wild.

k?
 

canndo

Well-Known Member
Oh, boletus have no gills, frankly I would rather come across some boleti any day. Yum.
 
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