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New To: Mushroom Hunting- 2014 - Where in the Wales are these things?

Jackalope77

Greenlighter
Joined
Sep 9, 2014
Messages
1
Hello!
Despite studying the dangers and precautions someone has to take before/during and after going mushroom hunting, I'm yet to find much information on where "hotspots" are for hunting. I know the season is around now, where about in the South Wales/Bristol area is good for finding MMushrooms
 
The reason you dont find 'hotspots' is because people with a 'hotspot' are going to harvest them all.
 
If you know exactly what your looking for, you shouldn't have any trouble finding them.
 
yeah that ^ Semilanceata is a common species, once you've ID'd one, you'll notice they're everywhere. I am not aware of any species similar to Semilanceata that are dangerous (please correct me if I'm wrong!), which makes searching for British Pychedelics mushrooms a little safer. Larger shrooms such as Psilocybe Cyanescens can easily be mistaken for a toxic mushroom, so until you have ID'd Cyanescens 100% without question, it's not wise to seek them. Cyanescens is much less common than Semilanceata however & grow under completely different conditions, under trees rather than in the grass... Depsite some effort, I have never ID'd Cyanescens in the wild, sadly.

Semilanceata looks different depending on whether conditions are wet or dry. Familiarise youreself with their appearance under both conditions to make finding them easier. Google will help you!
 
Things in Wales are really slow at the moment due to it being dry for the last couple of weeks, but will pick up a few days after the next significant rain.
Nobody will tell you their hotspots, but being in Wales you have a head start with lots of good places in easy reach of most people.
Look on shroomery for information on looking for libs, and also how things are currently in the UK.
I start high in the hills each year as they fruit there earliest (usually starting to show in numbers in August). Then as the season progresses you'll find them at lower altitude.
 
It's always hit and miss. And when you hit, boy do you usually hit. But they are everywhere. Everywhere within reason. As for how late does season go on...latest I've come across is November, at Wales's highest waterfall (Pistyll Rhaedr???) Something like that.

Richmond Park in London was my first regular haunt. Great fun avoiding the rutting stags too.
 
I agree that they are everywhere in rural Wales when the conditions are right, they used to grow in the fields surrounding our house, and even on my Grans lawn. Great, you might think, but there were so many curtain twitchers, hawk eyes, nosey bastards, and gossipers that word would have soon got back to my parents. Which would have been not so great. If a heavy dew is forecast one night, that should get a load springing up the next morning, if you're using known hotspots you could try getting there very early. Some mushroom pickers are seriosuly dedicated, and will be there at the crack of dawn.
 
Heh yes. I often go to various places to pick wild mushrooms, its one of my favourite ways to spend a cool autumn day, getting out of bed and going up to my haunts at the very first sign of light, up and out at the crack of dawn, and not coming back until it gets too dark to actually see anything, stopping off at a bar on the way home to slake my thirst and sooth my tired feet with a nice cold pint or three, then getting back home to cook up a nice tasty dish of whatever wild treats I might have found during my day out mushroom hunting.

Went out the other day and had what has to be the absolute luckiest day of the entire season so far, brought back some Lyophyllum, I think they are L.decastes, and almost 3kg of Lactarius deliciosus, the saffron milk-cap, quite a scarce and lucky find here in the UK, as they are ranked amongst the very finest wild mushrooms of them all. I happen to agree, on the day I found them once I got home, I roasted some over an open flame until they were tender and crunchy, stained orange and green by the milky liquid Lactarius bleed, and oh-so-tasty. Took back several carrier bags full, enough for me to keep munching on any time I get peckish for quite some time to come I think. Methinks I'll be having them for tea nearly every meal for the next two or three weeks to come.

Psilocybe cyanescens, now there is a 'shroom of quality. They are seriously, seriously potent little fuckers. Last time I had a harvest of those, I found several woodchip beds outside a local macdonalds absolutely laden with cyans, picked several 'happy meal' takeaway boxes full, and when I got them home and started the task of cleaning the bits of woodchips and assorted grime off them, to spore-print (which is ESSENTIAL with P.cyanescens!!! there are two lookalikes that would be fatal if consumed, namely Galerina spp. such as G.autumnalis, and Conocybe filaris, both of which have ochre-rusty orangy brown spore prints, and both of which can grow right in amongst the cyans, indeed I found one or two C.filaris in that harvest, that were successfully rooted out and disposed of when the spore printing showed those telltale giveaway rusty brown prints in amongst the dark violet blackish purple colored spore-prints of Psilocybe species, inc. P.cyanescens)

Spore print !EACH AND EVERY SINGLE MUSHROOM! snap the stems off and leave each individual stem lying next to its associated cap. This can, and if those two lookalikes are present, WILL save your life. Both Galerinas and Conocybe filaris contain the same notorious and lethal cyclopeptide amatoxins that are the poisonous principles present in the infamous death cap (Amanita phalloides), the destroying angel (A.virosa), Fool's mushroom or spring amanita, (A.verna), A.ocreata and a few other Amanitas.

These poisons act by inhibiting RNA polymerase III, which inhibits protein synthesis, specifically targeting the liver, although as poisoning progresses kidney failure and cerebral oedema as well as fucking around with blood chemistry, then causing fulminant liver failure and death. Its a slow, drawn out and miserably painful way to die. So do your spore printing when hunting cyans. They are, though, when correctly identified, a very worthwhile psilocybin mushroom, very strong indeed. Whilst I was cleaning them, as I was saying, I hadn't actually ingested a single mushroom, but merely from the damp caps, prolonged skin contact was quite sufficient enough to start both myself and the then housemate who went picking with me and helped clean our find tripping. Both our eyes got our pupils dilated to dinnerplate-esque proportions, the walls started breathing and warping, colors brightened, while I certainly tripped far harder when I actually took some of our mushrooms, just from the cleaning of them and cutaneous absorption of the actives, I'd say I reached a ++ that evening.

Took us both quite by surprise that did=D

Best fresh, or very carefully stored, as there is more psilocin, than there is psilocybin in P.cyanescens, and psilocin is the less stable out of the two to oxidation. Best rapidly dried in an inert atmosphere, such as a squirt of argon welding gas, and plenty silica gel packs, or if one can obtain and feel comfortable handling chemicals in a lab environment, in a desiccator full of nitrogen or argon, over some phosphorus pentoxide, the drying agent to end all drying agents, even capable, IIRC, of dehydrating fucking conc. sulfuric acid to sulfur trioxide! P2O5 (more correctly P4O10, but usually written P2O5) will aggressively rip the fucking shit out of the slightest moisture content of the shrooms and dry them very rapidly and effectively indeed. It is however, the anhydride of phosphoric acid, to a syrupy, highly concentrated and corrosive liquid of which it will turn once it completes its dehydrating action, and must be carefully handled, disposed of, or recycled as conc. phosphoric if one has a use for that.
 
Found something seriously unusual too recently, not edible or psychoactive, indeed almost certainly poisonous. A red-pored, fat and bulbous, reticulated stemmed, blue-discoloring bolete of the Satanas clade. Not B.satanas itself, but I think, maybe, just maybe Boletus rhodoxanthus. Quite shocking, as all the Satanas group are very, very, very rare here in britain, one book I have lists B.rhodoxanthus 'merely' as very rare, another claims it isn't yet known in britain. Found two fruitbodies in amongst a patch of cep and bay bolete (B.edulis and B.badius respectively). I wouldn't have picked them if I knew what they were before I could see the bright lurid red color of the pores, due to the extreme rarity of all the related boletes. But if I see another, I will take it, and preserve it to deposit in the nearest herbarium as a preserved specimen.
 
Psilocybe cyanescens, now there is a 'shroom of quality. They are seriously, seriously potent little fuckers. Last time I had a harvest of those, I found several woodchip beds outside a local macdonalds absolutely laden with cyans, picked several 'happy meal' takeaway boxes full, and when I got them home and started the task of cleaning the bits of woodchips and assorted grime off them, to spore-print (which is ESSENTIAL with P.cyanescens!!! there are two lookalikes that would be fatal if consumed, namely Galerina spp. such as G.autumnalis, and Conocybe filaris, both of which have ochre-rusty orangy brown spore prints, and both of which can grow right in amongst the cyans, indeed I found one or two C.filaris in that harvest, that were successfully rooted out and disposed of when the spore printing showed those telltale giveaway rusty brown prints in amongst the dark violet blackish purple colored spore-prints of Psilocybe species, inc. P.cyanescens)

Spore print !EACH AND EVERY SINGLE MUSHROOM! snap the stems off and leave each individual stem lying next to its associated cap. This can, and if those two lookalikes are present, WILL save your life. Both Galerinas and Conocybe filaris contain the same notorious and lethal cyclopeptide amatoxins that are the poisonous principles present in the infamous death cap (Amanita phalloides), the destroying angel (A.virosa), Fool's mushroom or spring amanita, (A.verna), A.ocreata and a few other Amanitas.

These poisons act by inhibiting RNA polymerase III, which inhibits protein synthesis, specifically targeting the liver, although as poisoning progresses kidney failure and cerebral oedema as well as fucking around with blood chemistry, then causing fulminant liver failure and death. Its a slow, drawn out and miserably painful way to die. So do your spore printing when hunting cyans. They are, though, when correctly identified, a very worthwhile psilocybin mushroom, very strong indeed. Whilst I was cleaning them, as I was saying, I hadn't actually ingested a single mushroom, but merely from the damp caps, prolonged skin contact was quite sufficient enough to start both myself and the then housemate who went picking with me and helped clean our find tripping. Both our eyes got our pupils dilated to dinnerplate-esque proportions, the walls started breathing and warping, colors brightened, while I certainly tripped far harder when I actually took some of our mushrooms, just from the cleaning of them and cutaneous absorption of the actives, I'd say I reached a ++ that evening.

Took us both quite by surprise that did=D

Best fresh, or very carefully stored, as there is more psilocin, than there is psilocybin in P.cyanescens, and psilocin is the less stable out of the two to oxidation. Best rapidly dried in an inert atmosphere, such as a squirt of argon welding gas, and plenty silica gel packs, or if one can obtain and feel comfortable handling chemicals in a lab environment, in a desiccator full of nitrogen or argon, over some phosphorus pentoxide, the drying agent to end all drying agents, even capable, IIRC, of dehydrating fucking conc. sulfuric acid to sulfur trioxide! P2O5 (more correctly P4O10, but usually written P2O5) will aggressively rip the fucking shit out of the slightest moisture content of the shrooms and dry them very rapidly and effectively indeed. It is however, the anhydride of phosphoric acid, to a syrupy, highly concentrated and corrosive liquid of which it will turn once it completes its dehydrating action, and must be carefully handled, disposed of, or recycled as conc. phosphoric if one has a use for that.

Great work there mate! So, you have ID'd Cyanescens in the wild, I see. We should be friends ;)

Cyanescens has blessed me with amongst the lighest, brightest, most hilarious, uplifting, colourful trips ever, that often compare to Liberty Cap/Semilanceata in quality. I have not had the same experiences on South American or Mexican cubes, these trips tend to be deeper & a little heavier. This is not a dosage issue, I have tried all kinds of shrooms at all kinds of doses.
 
hello!
Despite studying the dangers and precautions someone has to take before/during and after going mushroom hunting, i'm yet to find much information on where "hotspots" are for hunting. I know the season is around now, where about in the south wales/bristol area is good for finding mmushrooms

NO REQUESTING SOURCES

Raasy
 
People don't tend to share their hotspots because they quickly find half a dozen fucking hairy arsed hippies tramping all over said hotspot the next time they go.
 
I found some last week somewhere in England. It's been too warm & dry to find many so far. Hoping the weather gets cold & wet, but no frost for a while.
 
Hoping today will be fruitful! Conditions getting better. Dedfinite drop in temp here the last few days & a good bit of rain. Will post pics of pickings (as usual!) :D
 
Hello!
Despite studying the dangers and precautions someone has to take before/during and after going mushroom hunting, I'm yet to find much information on where "hotspots" are for hunting. I know the season is around now, where about in the South Wales/Bristol area is good for finding MMushrooms

When i lived in glastonbury we use to go up to the mendips - walk away from the road and find fields where sheep have been , we use to find huge rings with 2-300 shrooms, literally picked bin liners of them
 
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