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Posts Tagged ‘Amanita muscaria’

These are the first wild mushrooms I identify.  This is in Seattle, WA just last fall.  The greater region is mushroom heaven to many folks.  Resources for mushroom identifying, cultivating, research, scholarship and enthusiasm are at one’s fingertip here.  Plus the abundant mushrooms to be found in the region.  Plus it’s Paul Stamets country.  Plus Seattle was the point source for some very special spores, but sadly, not any more.

My first ID’d wild mushroom is a cluster of these growing out of the planted area of the Wallingford Post Office parking lot in Seattle late October.  I get an easy one for my first one, and a rather magical one at that.  If this isn’t the icon of mushrooms in depicted in fantastical splendor, I don’t know what is.

Amanita muscaria, fly agaric

Amanita muscaria, fly agaric, growing in a Wallingford Post Office parking lot, Seattle, WA

Then I go to a lecture on mushrooms from a biology professor (sorry, forgot who this was!) at University of Washington and learn about the magic and legend that surrounds the Amanita muscaria.  The professor recommended the book Soma: Divine Mushroom of Immortality, no longer in print but available from used book stores.  The story surrounding this mushroom is compelling enough that based on his recommendation, I buy the book.  It’s thick and musty and sits on my bookshelf, waiting to be read.  Still, what a cool nexus of finding the mushrooms popping out of a city parking lot and hearing about it’s legendary status in myth, lore and religion.

The following are some of the next mushrooms that I identify, with the help of mushroom books, Dr. Hildegard Hendrickson of the Puget Sound Mycological Society, and Mushroom Maynia at the Burke Museum.   These are rather common ones but boy did they stump me and I quickly realize how difficult mushroom ID’ing can be.

Trametes versicolor, Turkey Tail

Trametes versicolor, Turkey Tail, University of Washington Arboretum

Okay the Turkey tail is easy because it’s fairly common.  But it took me awhile to ID the Corpinus micaceus, or Mica inky cap.  It wasn’t until I took some home in a paper bag that gave me clues to what they were.  They became an inky mess within hours, as Coprinuses are apt to do.

Coprinus micaceus, Mica inky cap

Coprinus micaceus, Mica inky cap

Coprinus micaceus, Mica inky cap

Coprinus micaceus, Mica inky cap

Peeking under the cap of the Coprinus micaceus, one sees the sparkly mica-like crystal-like things.  The grainy things are on the caps as well.  The Mica inky cap goes from this (above) to this (below) due to deliquescence.

Coprinus micaceus, Mice inky cap after deliquescence

Coprinus micaceus, Mica inky cap after deliquescence

Coprinus micaceus, Mica inky cap after deliquescence

Coprinus micaceus, Mica inky cap after deliquescence

The Cornell Mushroom Blog has a great page on deliquescence.  And I fall in love with the word and the vast world of inky caps.  I did this painting this weekend, illustrating some inky caps that I’ve encountered (and one that I have not).

let's deliquesce

let's deliquesce, watercolor by Anne Yen, ©2009 Anne Yen

So let’s deliquesce shall we?  More posts to come, I’m playing catch up with this blog here.

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Amanita muscaria top

Amanita muscaria, Wallingford Post Office parking lot, Seattle WA

Lately, I’ve had mushrooms float around my head and wake me up at night.  Their stalks with caps or their non-capped globular/blobular shapes drifting around in my mindspace during sleep.  On a free day, I’m walking around the city with my eyes to the ground and if I’m lucky, I’ll find mushrooms.  I’ll take pictures of them, bring them home or both.  I’ve got mushroom books spread out on my desk, bookmarked mushroom websites on the computer, and brewed mushroom teas in the closet (kombucha) and refrigerator (reishi).  I was a purple/green mushroom for a halloween party this year.  How did this all come about?

The last year has taken me from Seattle to Japan to Brooklyn.  Mushrooms were a constant in these lands and engaged me with place and time.  I took some classes, joined 2 mycological clubs, and took a lot of photos.  Then I started painting the mushrooms and I think I would like to become a mushroom painter.  What do you think?

My mushroom fascination did not sprout up overnight.  It has always been there, just as fungus is always and forever present in the world.  Just depends on how it manifests itself to our feeble eyes.  Mushrooms are the fruiting bodies that appear to us from the fungus webbing it’s way through the earth, floating around in the air we breathe.  And who isn’t fascinated or delighted by the appearance of mushrooms popping up from the ground, jutting out of a tree, sprouting from the floor of your car?  Okay that last one means trouble.  Who’s not intrigued by these weird alien-looking things that do all sorts of things to you if you eat them.  Here’s a fun synapsis of what they can do: http://www.weebls-stuff.com/toons/Shrooms/

Anyhow, my dad foraged for matsutake mushrooms after he retired from being an engineer.  I went with him a few times and it was one of the best ways to spend time with him.  I ask him when he’s going again but it’s been a long time since he’s gone and I don’t know if he ever will again.  He’s feeling too old to go again, me thinks.

This blog is not gonna be all about mushrooms.  It’ll be about whatever but was a good place for me to post these mushroom photos I started taking a year ago.  Please feel free to comment and to ID any you recognize.  Thank you very much for sharing!

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