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These growing out of a cactus pot not long ago

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They look like Leucocoprinus birnbaumii, Upside. They get called the "flower pot mushroom" since they always seem to come up in potted plants.

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Well they are out in force in the sydney burbs at the mo... and this is on the road side :wink:

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B

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Edited by Master B
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lucky i dont stand in that.

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the younger this mushroom is the more it looks like wombat poo.

a solid green when its at the button stage.

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also found these growing on about 50 trees, could have filled a ute.

turkey tail

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Unusual to see green mushrooms - I saw some similar ones around Oberon, thought they might be these: Cortinarius austrovenetus. Love the common-name for them, "green skinhead"

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are they wax caps?

we have green wax caps theyre so pretty ...

and red n yellow and orange ones too .. hoping there's a purple one : 3

maybe not but here's some cool wax caps

Edited by ☽Ţ ҉ĥϋηϠ₡яღ☯ॐ€ðяئॐ♡Pϟiℓℴϟℴ

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are they wax caps?

we have green wax caps theyre so pretty ...

and red n yellow and orange ones too .. hoping there's a purple one : 3

maybe not but here's some cool wax caps

yep there are some yellow and orange ones.

this is the closest to purple, i have found. this afternoon in fact.

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i think maybe lepisa nuda. doing a print at the moment.
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rawrz one of my utmost faves!

looks a bit field blewit-like for a wood blewit from my eyes but only by the general shape and lighting of the cap..

the nuda's i find tend to be more domey and very bluey on the purple in comparison..

and the young saeva's I find tend to look just like yours but browny/whitey-er

i hope its a nuda for ya though mate!

*adds recent finds pics*

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a female Marchantia polymorphapost-14443-0-91856800-1435697926_thumb.j

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seems like a nuda

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maybe my local strain of nuda has a very slow gill growth compared with most wood blewits?

or i've only found them after a certain stage of their development?

will be on the lookout for them at the end of summer though to try find a gilly one in my known patch

Edited by ☽Ţ ҉ĥϋηϠ₡яღ☯ॐ€ðяئॐ♡Pϟiℓℴϟℴ

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These growing out of a cactus pot not long ago

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I had a nice surprise once with gymnopilus luteofolias from a carved log planter pot,, sadly my partner threw it away before I could ID it some days later "because it was going mouldy" gah! ,

anyhow... wishing you some plant pot gyms too, try an aged log planter in ya garden , or 2?

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From a recent trip in the south west:

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Unfortunately there were no nice pictures of subs as I couldn't find any to take a pic of.

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Went to Macarthur with Son playing soccer and wandered the local pine forests there , any ID help appreciated ...

Second and third are same mushy underneath and on top - a bolete of what sort?

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I would probably say they are Suillus luteus (slippery jacks), that people insist on eating but I find hard to enjoy. You peel the skin and remove sponge and then work out some kind of recipe. Keep water away - they go soggy, and so can be quite mushy when found in wet ground.

They can often be found here in Oz together with Amanita muscaria (in your pic), Lactarius deliciosus, Tricholoma fracticum, and Tricholoma terreum. The latter are delicious when cooked in the normal way.

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Suillus sp.. they are good dried.. if you dont find anything better

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Found these a few weeks ago at about 1300m elevation and 30 degrees South latitude. Under a large eucalypt.

Not sure what they are.

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^ they may be a continarius sp

two and half months in - and the season continues, the pics that look sideways are the right way round............P. subaeruginosa

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Edited by pimento
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This one was all by itself on a hilltop paddock near Casino; growing from some dry cattle dung. I'd generally only found Panaeolus Antillarum around that spot before.

Unfortunately I didn't take any more photos at the time.

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^@pimento - I'm thinking you might be right, I'll see if I can narrow it down over time.

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awetongue.gif

nice TH.

the mushroom is our friend.

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the tuft, ringed one could be either Armillaria sp or Pholiota sp...maybe

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goodness , id had them down as non-active/ non-staining Gymnopilus junonius/spectabilis

Ah, so that's what those guys are! I've been seeing these for years and always just assumed they were an Armillaria - Gym fits much better.

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