Special Issue, October 6 and 8, 2010
Buck's Lake
By Herman Brown, Greenville, CA
Must be keyed in to work
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October 6 | October 8


On October the 8th,  we went back up to Buck's Lake, to see if we could find a representative sample of our "Tylopilus", recently requested by an interested researcher.

We found our sample, plus a few large examples of a more typical Boletus edulis, one white chanterelle, some Honey Mushrooms, a Boletus rubripes, various Cortinarius, a few Amanita muscaria, old Sulfur Shelves, more Phaeolus schweinitzii, Dead Men's Feet, Neolentinus ponderosus, Pholiota aurivella, plus an unidentified fuzzy conk., among many others.

Below are some of the new pictures taken:

Click on any picture  to see a larger image. Best viewed with the browser set for full screen


What is this?
 

A White Chanterelle! Our first for this area
  

Honey mushrooms, looking like they were NOT 
growing our of the stump, but below it in the ground
 

Boletus rubripes
  
 

Boletus rubripes removed
Another bitter bolete
 

Rupripes sliced
 
 

Cortinarius sp.
 

Honey mushrooms growing in a diversion stream bed.
 

Tylopilus? (next three photos)
 

 
 

Amanita muscaria
 

Lyophyllum?
 

Old Sulfur shelves
 

Phaeolus schweinitzii rosette

More Phaeolus schweinitzii 


Dead Man's Foot (Pisolithus tinctorius)
 


Dead Men's feet

Neolentinus ponderosus
 

What I call Gomphus kauffmanii or a faded G. bonari
 

Large Boletus edulis
 

  
 

Reticulations
 

Banded Wooly Bear caterpillar
 

Pholiota aurivella
 

  

Scarlet Columbine
 

A fuzzy conk
 

"Tylopilus" at home

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