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The Corroboree

∂an

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Posts posted by ∂an

  1. Any ideas on the ID for this impressive specimen? Could it be in the gymnopilus genus? This is the second flush that have come from this spot in the past month. As can seen in the photo, it is growing from the base of a gum tree. Location is Hunter Valley NSW. Cheers!

    edit: it has gills of a yellow colour similar to the flesh.

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  2. I lived in Germany for a few years, it got down to -20c in winter and rained every second day, on average. However in summer all that water and with luck some sunshine creates a very fertile environment for growing temperate region annuals. A Good green house sharing some warmth from the house allows for growing sub zero intolerant plants and cacti through the winter. Maybe Scotland is different, but in continental europe many interesting temperate region plants of medicinal interest grow. The local botanic garden where i lived had many solanace plants such as tobacco, brugmansia, henbane and datura, and others such as hemp plants, ephedra, poppies and trichocerus cacti, to name the obvious ones. There are also many edible plants and fungi growing 'wild', such as Burdock, sorrel, wild garlics, boletus edulis, not to mention game animals such as rabbit and deer. Just watch be aware of Echinococcus multilocularis when foraging for wild berries etc, I didn't find out about this fox transmitted parasite until I had been there for a year...

    Yes the winter is grey, cold and wet, but there is something beautifully melancholic about the snow and deciduous forests. If I was to live in the uk, Scotland would be the place to be I reckon as it still has remote areas that can be considered wilderness.

    • Like 4
  3. Nice pimento... I see subs, gyms and Amanitas, amongst many other interesting fungi. I'm a little bit envious!

    Yeah that cluster of young purple mushrooms really stood out from the drab green and brown of the forest. Went back to have a look at them on the weekend. They become a more pale purple with age, and have a layer of slime on the cap. Lots of them in one spot at the peak of the 200m high hill.

  4. Yeah I think some extra amalyze may be required. So I could cook up some sweet potato and add some of the water to the mash? Saliva contains amalyze as well, hence the tradition of chewing and spitting out the corn I guess. Might do a bit of both.

    Yeast is the other thing I need to think about - a regular ale yeast might not work so well with corn, or at least won't make a very authentic chicha. I'll chase up some koji or similar - helping convert starch to sugar is probably what the South American wild yeasts did.

  5. This summer past, I grew a crop of purple maize from a dried cob an argentinian friend gave me.

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    This type of corn is not sweet at all and very hard, so cannot be readily prepared for eating through steaming or even boiling. Reading up on the traditional use of purple maize, it seems in peru at least it was mainly used to make a type of unfermented chicha that was sweetened with pineapple.

    This seems nice, but I would like to try and make a fermented corn beer similar to chicha de jora, that would normally use yellow or white corn. Does anyone know if the starch in purple corn can be converted to sugars using either the traditional (chewing in the mouth) or modern (mashing) techniques?

    I have soaked, sprouted and dried about 2kg of the kernels. I also have some malted barley and ale yeast, and was thinking about combing the corn and barley malt in a 1:1 ratio, and fermenting using a standard all grain procedure. Alternatively I could chew the 2kg of kernels (sounds like fun for a lazy sunday) and use something like sauerkraut juice for yeast, to make a more authentic chicha.

    Any ideas or tips? cheers!

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    • Like 2
  6. Foraging finds from last week, dry sclerophyll forest on the slopes of a small 'mountain' rising 200m, 30km from coast. Mushrooms everywhere after all the rain we have had. Not sure of the species or even genus for most of them, so they are posted here without ID, to appreciate their beauty. Enjoy!

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    • Like 5
  7. Freshly dried, I found the taste of the caps tolerable when powdered and downed quickly, but when stored for some time the already intense taste became too much for me. Makes cactus and vine teas seem quite tasty IMO

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  8. Hey zed, yeah they looked and tasted a lot like the boletus edulis I've seen in Europe. There was one patch of about 20, and also another patch of a blue staining bolete with yellow stem and red cap. Unfortunately the universe conspired to prevent photos - I picked them in a torrential rain storm, and then straight into the dehydrator at home. Went for a walk through the forest again today but didn't find any more.

  9. Have been for three hunts since the floods hit last week. Lots of fungi action here in the hunter, including some absolutely massive boletus mushrooms that were unfortunately past their picking date. Have a good haul of porcini in the dehydrator.

    Found these today, they look like fly Agaric but are much smaller than what I have seen in pine forests. These wre growing under eucalypt trees.

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    They have the egg shaped volva, veil remnants on the red cap and white stem. Only thing is they are 20 - 30 mm tall. Any ideas?

    Edit: actually some stems were off white to yellowish white.

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    • Like 1
  10. Wow she is huge! Ummm I mean beautiful.... Does she live at your place?! Not sure if I could sleep at night with that man eater about give my guy a few years to beef up, then we can talk

    No sign of the frog this morning in the tank, maybe it really was stuck? I'll make the tank more frog friendly anyway, with PVC access - in dry times it is probably a good water source for them.

    • Like 2
  11. Rescue complete :P As soon as the sun set, he (or she?) hopped over the yucca, up the plank and onto the lip of the tank!

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    It is such impressive creatures, oozing reptilian zen through huge black eyes.

    Yeah eventually I will put some big rocks and plants in there, but the wall is my height so not an easy task. There is a lot of flood water around, but this guy has been hanging around the house for a few months now. I have a bunch of succulents and herbs nearby that attracts insects, so prob not a bad spot to be a frog :)

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    • Like 7
  12. Also I've been checking on him regularly the past 4 days or so, and each time he was up against the wall, looking a bit stuck. Maybe it is choosing to stay in there due to the tadpole or the flood? At least now it can get out if necessary

  13. This morning, before reading amazonians reply, I put in the tank an old car tyre, a plank of wood and the base of a yucca that had been recently pulled up. I then used a mop to scoop up mr frog and place him near the new rubber island. I came back after an hour and the frog was on the tyre, hiding underneath the plank, seemingly happy with the new arrangements.

    After reading amazonians post, maybe the yucca wasn't such a great idea. I will take it out this evening, and get some water plants to put in there on the weekend. And some rocks. At least now I am not worried he will drown in the tank.

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    • Like 4
  14. It was before all that water accumulated in the tank that I saw it on the steps. I thought Maybe it can't climb up the concave concrete wall, or somehow got stuck in the tank in the flood.

    I have put a plank against the shortest side so it can climb out, and will deposit large objects for it to clamber on tomorrow. Will post pics of the frogs new setup. Would be cool to see the tadpole grow into a frog.

    Thanks y'all :D

    • Like 6
  15. after the big flood that hit nsw this week, the old concrete water tank at my house has filled up with about a foot of water. and it has inhabitants - a big green tree frog that I have sometimes seen on the back steps at night, and a little tadpole that I assume is its offspring based on observing it regularly coming right up beside the frog.

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    The frog has been in this half out, half in position for the past 3 days. Usually the tank only has an inch or of water at the bottom. I have read that green tree frogs cannot swim so well, and prefer to live in a humid environment rather than in the water itself.

    Should I try and do something to help the frog? I think the tank must have been its usual hideout, and worked well when there was only a small amount of water. Should I:

    a) drain the tank to its previous state

    B) help the frog get out

    c) do nothing

    I guess it could get out if it wanted to (?), so option b is out. maybe it is staying in this position to be with its offspring?

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    • Like 2
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