|
|
|
Author |
|
Message | |
|
cab
Joined: 01 Nov 2004 Posts: 32429
|
|
|
|
|
sean Downsizer Moderator
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 42219 Location: North Devon
|
|
|
|
|
Mat S
Joined: 07 Nov 2004 Posts: 282 Location: Leicester
|
|
|
|
|
tahir
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 45674 Location: Essex
|
|
|
|
|
cab
Joined: 01 Nov 2004 Posts: 32429
|
Posted: Tue Nov 16, 04 4:20 pm Post subject: |
|
Mat S wrote: |
Cab - what type of land are you finding all these shrooms on? I'm finding the occasional parasol & shaggy ink cap but no blewits or oysters. |
Hi Mat.
The land where I've been getting field blewits has been everything from municipal grass (the bits of nice greenery left in by 1960's developers in what is now mostly bought out council estates), old grazing pasture around the City Centre, the ornamental park also in the city centre, patches around the local woods and a big field by a hotel used for outdoor functions. This is all in and around Cabbridge, so the soil is pretty basic with an odd little lump of boulder clay under the city. That said, I've also had reports of monster hauls of field blewits all over the country.
Try walking around the outside of fields; look for patches where there might be rings in the grass, somewhere near the trees, and you've a fighting chance of field blewits at this time of year. It helps if it's been really wet. I find that if the field is a we bit too settled to yield many shaggy caps, there's a good chance of Agaricus and blewits.
As for oysters, the type of land is unimportant. It's dead and decaying wood you want. Recently I've had oyster mushrooms from dead willow on the fens near the city centre in Cambridge, and a whole load from the local patch of scrubby woodland (on dead sycamore and oak, mostly). Same woods have yielded lots of shaggy parasols this year, many agaricus, some puffballs, pluteus, lots of edible Clitocybe, and assorted other odds and sods.
I'm getting lots from around willow trees out on the fen at the moment. Mostly Agrocybe cylindracea. Up by the footpaths in the fens, where there's been digign about in recent years, the moist weather has encouraged a huge amount of Volvariella speciosa.
I'm also finding wood blewits a plenty fir and pine, and it's always worth looking at any areas of wood chippings for wood blewits in winter.
I guess what I'm saying is that this year they're everywhere. I'm told you still can't walk about in Thetford woods without tripping over mushrooms. |
|
|
|
|
Guest
|
|
|
|
|
Mat S
Joined: 07 Nov 2004 Posts: 282 Location: Leicester
|
|
|
|
|
|
Archive
Powered by php-BB © 2001, 2005 php-BB Group Style by marsjupiter.com, released under GNU (GNU/GPL) license.
|