| Rhodotus palmatus |
You can't make this stuff up.
I should have sent that image to NASA, and said, "I am an amateur astronomer. Look what I found! It was in the north-east sky."
| These are the nice pink gills |
It's one of my all-time favorite mushrooms.
It's a mushroom blog! I am crazy for wild mushrooms, and all their friends and associates. I go hiking in central Missouri, looking for mushrooms, and find lots of other woodland citizens along the way. Heavy on macro-photography, with bite-sized fact morsels throughout.
| Rhodotus palmatus |
| These are the nice pink gills |
| Annual cicada, Tibicen sp. |
| 3 ocelli |
| Walnut Sphinx moth |
| Amorpha juglandi |
| Young Green-spored Lepiota, veil remnants on cap |
| The enormous fairy ring, 10-12' across (later I read that that's not really all that big for them) |
| Chlorophyllum molybdites
Got another alert on the Mushroom Hotline (thank you, JS!) that this fairy ring was back--I had seen it while driving a few weeks earlier, but by the time I got there 2 days later it was mowed down. This time I went the day of the call (and I wore my cape).
Then I marched over to my next-door neighbor's house to show him a huge specimen I'd collected for a spore-print (much bigger even than the one in this photo), and he said he saw me standing in the doorway with it, and thought, "What is that, a LAMP?"
I was pretty sure what it was, after rooting around in field guides and online, but the spore print confirmed it--green! From an all-white mushroom! To be fair, these were very freshly opened. By the time I got it home, the gills were already starting to darken with maturing spores.
Not lethal, but still poisonous, and WILL make you good and SICK. And if you're in bad shape to begin with (or just little), you could die. So, no Chlorophyllum molybdites for you!
*Many different species will grow in rings. All rings are not Green-spored Lepiotas! And all Green-spored Lepiota don't grow in rings! |

| Lawn liver |
| Witch's Hat mushroom, Hygrocybe conica, sweet little thing...that little knob on top is typical. |
| Bird's Nest fungi (Crucibulum laeve) on old hickory shell. These are really common, yet it feels like the first time every time I see them (because I think they're so cute). The "eggs" are peridioles, or spore-sacs, and a drop of rain will cause them to shoot out of the nest, trailing a little sticky strand, and then it will stick to a leaf or something, and then the peridiole will break open, and spew spores around. At least, that's what I hear; I've never seen it (but, one day, I will). The yellow one in the foreground hasn't opened yet. |
| Red Russula. That white "bloom" on the ant one is dropped spores from the one above it. |
| Exidia alba--synonym Ductifera pululahuana |
| Lots of Chanterelles |
| Lactarius indigo |
| Hollow stem and blue fingers |
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| Ganoderma applanatum, "Artist's conk" |

| Hemitrichia clavata |
| OZONIUM of Coprinellus domesticus |
| "Carnival Candy Slime," Arcyria denudata |
| "Chocolate Tube Slime," Stemonitis splendens |
| a bunch of Chocolate Tube Slime on a log |