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Mushroom Season 2012

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You shouldn't be looking in cow paddocks buddy, your thinking of psilocybe cubensis. You should be looking for psilocybin subaeringosa at this time of year, they are a wood loving species of mushroom that grow in abundance in certain areas. Do some research on subs and their habitat, it will pay off. If you've got a car I suggest driving out past the blue mountains and going for a long bush walk in an elevated eucalypt forest (i.e on the scarp of a mountain). But that being said they will grow pretty much anywhere, so if that fails check out the lower lying areas. && If you don't have a car I suggest you scope out parks that are close to you, there are definitely subs in suburbs also.

Best of luck.
 
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hihi

ADelaide season is in fulllll bloom gguys ;D
 
These are not my pictures.
Just wanted to show you guys some giant subs & subclusters some guy found on a recent hunt.
I've never seen clusters this big. Fuck!

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INSANE
 
I loved that cat more than anything. More than I've ever loved myself. More than I loved my wife. She is the only creature I have every felt close to. So you can imagine how I felt when I killed her. But, during her short life, she was adored for every second. She only responded to me. She hated my wife. She hated my brother. She hated all other cats. I was her entire world. And, coming up on LSD, I drove into my driveway. I saw her, a split-second before she ran under the wheel of the car. If I was sober, I don't think I would've been able to stop in time. I tell myself that I wouldn't have been able to. She was deaf, so she didn't hear the car. If it had been a cat that could hear, then it wouldn't have happened. Still, I cursed myself to hell for what I did. I told myself that I would never let that moment go. I went to the RSPCA to get a deaf kitten after she died. I wanted to replace her. I needed to. I said I wanted an albino deaf kitten. The woman asked me why I was buying a kitten. I told her, I ran over my cat. She was deaf, I say. An albino. I want to replace her. The woman at the RSPCA tells me I don't deserve to get another cat. She says deaf cats die all the time because people let them outside. Apparently, I was never meant to let her go beyond the confines of my house. Her death was an inevitability. So, I killed her by driving a car on LSD and by letting her outside. But, she deserved to go outside. She loved playing in the garden and climbing on the roof of my neighbour's house. She was a weirdo. A cat that eats Amanita Muscaria. A true gem. And, I miss her very much.
 
Look how much substrate is still attached to the cluster in that first pic. That is just NOT COOL. There's nothing worse than going to a patch and seeing it trashed by people scooping huge chunks out of the ground. This damages the mycelium - it now needs to spend time trying to recover instead of producing more mushrooms. Plus this method takes all the tiny pins before they have a chance to release their spores. This is the definition of patch rape. Please cut shrooms out of the ground, don't ruin patches for everyone else, and yourself!
 
Are you serious Fin? How the fuck do you expect to leave the mycelium with such a massive cluster? You can't cut something like that.
When it's not a cluster with multiple digits you're a fuckhead for ripping up the roots, but I don't know what else you expect to do with those.
 
Sure you can cut them, use a small pair of scissors or a knife and start with the outside ones. In the picture they've just grabbed the whole cluster and wrenched them out of the ground - that's no way to treat a patch! Even if you were going to pull them out, you could definitely do it in a way that doesn't remove so much substrate. Digging up the ground, picking pins etc is just greedy and unnecessary.
 
Yeah there isn't any justification for this. I've pulled thicker clusters than that out of the ground without ripping up the mike network, using my fingers; it is indeed possible to do. You should NEVER rip up the mycelium, or at least do your best not to.
 
Look how much substrate is still attached to the cluster in that first pic. That is just NOT COOL. There's nothing worse than going to a patch and seeing it trashed by people scooping huge chunks out of the ground. This damages the mycelium - it now needs to spend time trying to recover instead of producing more mushrooms. Plus this method takes all the tiny pins before they have a chance to release their spores. This is the definition of patch rape. Please cut shrooms out of the ground, don't ruin patches for everyone else, and yourself!

Yeah I was going to say this guy may have got some good looking pictures, but he'll be disappointed if he ever returns there to pick more as none will be growing, as will absolutely everyone else who ever picked in that spot.

He may as well have salted the fucking earth before he left too. I'm pretty sure in the top pic you can see half developed mushrooms forming from the mycelium, if I were him, I would have let it all grow out.

Also I love the hilariously conspicuous face in the second picture in the bottom left.
 
I was going to comment on it as well. When picking mushrooms you gently twist the shrooms never pull. By pulling you have pulled out a bunch of substrate along with heaps of pins that would of matured to a full grown mushroom. Thats a big no no in mycology but I suppose you live and learn. Those shrooms are quite genetically deformed or some other factor has caused mutations. Seems like some harsh chemical or similar was exposed to the medium/mycelium. Just a tip for everyone especially for people who want to go back to the same patch in the future. After gently picking them spray it down with some clean sterile water (gently mist it) This will help the substrate regain its water content (Mushrooms are 90% water so they basiclaly use all the water they can get from teh substrate) This will provide / aid in getting bigger and multiple flushes. Just dont mist any pins if possible as this will stunt the growth.

Another thing what you can do its do a patch up. I love to use vermiculite +water and coconut husk strerilized in a jar then when cooled patching up the patch where the shrooms were removed to add more moisture, a bit of nutrients and a new stronger better surface for the mycelium to grow on. This will produce much larger flushes also. Works very well. Please be careful handling shrooms they are very delicate. If you want to go back there again then its wise to do these techniques.
 
Well it doesnt really matter because the patch those came from is not accessible by random people.
They were on someone's property far away who let them take the mycelium home to start a garden.
Stop being twats and appreciate the picturs
 
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