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let's see your veggie garden {pics}

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plantdude

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Any mushroom experts out there? I see a tree fungus growing at the base of my redbud tree and I'm curious if it's a Gandoderma.
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Just thought it would be ironic since the kids bought me a reishi mushroom (Gandoderma sp) growing kit for Father's Day and I have some in the process of growing in the bedroom.
 

plantdude

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I'm an experienced amateur, and we have neither that tree nor mushroom species in Alberta. Moreover, my books are packed because I'm moving next week.

But, yes, I'm pretty sure it is a Ganoderma. Possibly G. tsugae.
Ha, that's too funny - paying $20 for something growing naturally in the backyard. I grew a few batches of lions mane in early spring from a kit and we went out for a walk in the woods shortly after and found some lions mane growing naturally. I used to culture and grow my own oyster mushrooms on straw and never even realized they are common in this area until earlier this year.
I guess it's worth a few bucks to know what you are getting though. The only mushrooms I ever pick to eat in nature are a few species of bolete, the rest I wouldn't want to risk misidentifying.
 

ChinaVoodoo

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Ha, that's too funny - paying $20 for something growing naturally in the backyard. I grew a few batches of lions mane in early spring from a kit and we went out for a walk in the woods shortly after and found some lions mane growing naturally. I used to culture and grow my own oyster mushrooms on straw and never even realized they are common in this area until earlier this year.
I guess it's worth a few bucks to know what you are getting though. The only mushrooms I ever pick to eat in nature are a few species of bolete, the rest I wouldn't want to risk misidentifying.
The thing you miss out on most, growing your own, is going into the woods. Also, there's the fact that you have the opportunity to learn from identifying more species than what you set out to find.

Many mushrooms are difficult to find except when they are easy to find. My first year picking mushrooms, I found lots of Morchella and Verpa, but the next ten years were brutal. My second year, I found lots of Hericium (lion's mane), but picked more than I subsequently found over the following decade. There was once a wicked patch of Agaricus bitorquis busting through the soil on the west side of 99st, and 48ave one year. Beautiful, bug free solid, crunchy monsters. Never again. I found Laetiporus sulfurus, which is common elsewhere, but extremely rare here. If it was the first time I went mushroom picking, I would be excited about finding more, but never would. I found two massive specimens of Grifola frondosa, easily 2lbs each in 2001. I visited the same location several times and didn't see it again until this year, but in a different location. Red staining Agaricus are rare in Alberta and I found them (Agaricus haemorroidarius) consistently over several years in a specific part of the Whitemud Creek Ravine, but the area eventually overgrew with invasive plants from the homes above the ravine, and they are no more.

Pleurotus (oyster) are easy and consistent in late spring on dead poplar, but they consistently come avec les maggots. I would rather eat homegrown.

This year, i found a poisonous agaricus I had never found before. I saw it, and instantly misidentified it as the edible Agaricus sylvicola which I have picked and eaten many times. But I went through my systematic ID habits and realized it wasn't what I had originally thought. The aroma was wrong, there were no spruce nearby - spruce aren't necessary according to the books, but it's where i have always found them - and the staining reaction was different: yellow bruising on cap surface, check, yellow staining on stem surface, check, no yellow staining in the very base of the inner flesh of the stalk, wrong! It did stain. The wrong aroma, habitat, and staining reaction likely makes it Agaricus xanthodermis. So, mushrooms is like gun safety, or airplane checklists. Don't be complacent.

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plantdude

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I used to do a lot of mushroom hunting when I was younger and lived in different states - just like I used to be a lot more up on plant ID. I never did get into collecting anything but boletes to eat though, just wasn't the worth the risk in my mind. By the time I moved to Arkansas I had kids and the only time to be out in the woods comfortably here is the middle of winter so I slacked off quite a bit.
I need to get back into again one of these days, Arkansas does have some really neat plants and fungi for those willing to brave the mosquitoes, buffalo gnats, chiggers, and venomous snakes in the Mississippi delta region. The swamps become much more kind when the temps start falling below 50 and the bugs and reptiles mellow out a bit - unfortunately that is mostly winter time and not much grows that time of year. Plus this thing called hunting season tends to distract me a wee bit during that time:)
 

plantdude

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Just so you know, there are poisonous Boletus too. They are more common with hardwoods. Species with red pores, or white pores with blue (not purple) staining should be avoided.
Yep, and bitter ones. I was a kid when I first started mushroom hunting, the guy teaching me was supposedly pretty knowledable on mushrooms. We collected a bunch of boletes and through them in the pot for dinner. I took one bite and it was terrible and bitter tasting. I realized the idiot could have killed me and his wife and kids because he obviously screwed up. After that I made it a point to be able to positively identify 4 species of boletes (2 of which grew in my backyard) and limit myself to those. There are no severely fatal species of boletes (like with agaricus), but some of them would sure make a person wish they were dead (like you said, many with the red pores and blue staining).
I guess I learned my lesson early on about mushrooms, a snack just isn't worth severe pain or death and even knowledgable people can get things wrong sometimes;) Nothing against those knowledable enough to forage for their own mushrooms though - it's just not something I would want to risk unless I was 100% sure. It s a wonderful hobby finding and identifying them even without eating them though.
 

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I really like the veggie moods.
VeggieSmileEmoji.jpg
But the unhappy one seems sad.
VeggieFrownEmoji.jpg


Bob
 

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Although none of the fruit from this mini-Kabocha have fully ripened, several seem to have reached their destined size, which seems to be about the size of an orange.

Garden20200728_5288_miniKabocha_size_600a.jpg


Growing above the Kabocha, this is the distinctive okra blossom.

Garden20200728_5289_okraBlossom_600.jpg


Here's that small bed (Kabocha and okra) in the back of the house.

Garden20200828_5290_backVeggieBed_600.jpg


Where I dug out the garlic in mid-late June, I planted seed for the same Kabocha.

Garden20200728_5291_latePlantedKabocha_600.jpg


These tomatoes just haven't shown the vigor that I would expect from them. One green tomato vanished yesterday. I found not a trace of it, as though a hungry critter carefully picked it, and carried it off.

Garden20200728_5292_tomatoBed_600.jpg


This shortened veggie bed is doing quite well, despite a neighbor occasionally grazing the top of the beans. The Little Leaf cukes have been prolific. I'll be putting up some pickles today or tomorrow.

Garden20200728_5296_PattipanCukesBeans_bed_600.jpg


Bob
 

plantdude

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I grew some corn in CO once and it was totally infested with massive amounts of corn smut. I took one look at them and pitched them. I wished now I would have saved them since they are considered a delicacy in some countries. Live and learn I guess.
Your male tassels had more kernels than some of my female corn cobs did this spring if it makes you feel any better.
 
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