Has it really been almost four years since I blogged about mushrooms? This afternoon me and my wife repeated our September 8, 2010 expedition to the hills between Lakes Lundsjön and Trehörningen and picked almost a kilo of mushrooms in a bit more than an hour. We got:
- King bolete, Stensopp/Karl Johan, Boletus edulis
- Bay bolete, Brunsopp, Boletus badius
- Orange birch bolete, Tegelsopp, Leccinum versepelle
- Birch bolete, Björksopp, Leccinum scabrum
- Entire russula, Mandelkremla, Russula integra
- Two kinds of red or brown brittlegill, mild-tasting and thus non-poisonous. Scandyland has more than 130 species of brittlegill, none are deadly and luckily there's a simple taste test for which ones are good to eat.
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At my wife's suggestion, I quit work 1½ hour early today and cycled with her and the kids into the woods to pick mushrooms. Lovely sunny afternoon, and I can report that the hills between Lakes Lundsjön and Trehörningen are rich in boletes right now. Here are the species we got:
King bolete,…
An hour and a half in the woods around little nearby lakelet Knipträsk garnered us a fine harvest of mushrooms. The last time I blogged about a shroom-picking expedition we had ten kinds. Today we had eleven, most of them hedgehogs and boletes:
Terracotta hedgehog, Rödgul taggsvamp, Hydnum…
Mushroom picking again this morning, this time in the area between Lakelets Skinnmossen and Knipträsket. Found more velvet and birch boletes than we cared to pick.
King bolete, Stensopp/Karl Johan, Boletus edulis
Orange birch bolete, Tegelsopp, Leccinum versepelle
Velvet bolete, Sandsopp, Suillus…
My wife and I made a short mushrooming excursion to Lake Lundsjön after lunch. Little more than half an hour in the woods garnered us only four species, but huge amounts of one: velvet bolete. We went home early simply because we didn't need more mushrooms. I'm stewing them with cream. Never had…
Thanks or coverage. I need more rain in Michigan. I'd never heard B. edulis called Karl Johan, and wondered if it was some phallic reference (turns out it isn't), just a Swedish king that liked them. More shockingly, I'd never heard Russulas called brittlegill - us old-timers in the U.S. are pretty used to the scientific names cause we had lots of shrooms without common names, and still do. Brittle gill is pretty apt.