Adam, your videos are almost like crash courses, every second is jam packed with only the necessary information, and you do it with such ease. This is quality work!
These videos are terrific. My 30 year old son has become a mushroom hunter recently. I sometimes walk with him during his searches for mushroom "honey holes" as he calls them. Edible or in-edible it is fun to look for them. He is trying to train his dog to find the edible ones, so far this is a no go. The dog is more interested in following the chipmunks and squirrels.
I only have three years to catch up, I'm 69, so I hope I can sit down at you campfire some day... I am stone dumb about shrooms but I do use the medicinal varieties. I did cook a roast with some black morels once and it was among the best. I ate some false morels up in Michigan once, and as I over cooked and reached too high a temperature, the Hydrazine started blasting off in the skillet. These surely were the true False Morels, containing the chemical Hydrazine, also found in Rocket fuel. They are deadly, though you can eat them for years, ... then one day, THUD !
I’m not a big fan of eating mushrooms myself, but I have some chanterelles growing under the oak trees in my front yard. This video has given me the confidence to harvest them for the people I know who DO want to cook with them!
Thanks Adam. You helped me realize I found Jack-O-Lanterns. You're fun to watch. I can tell you are so passionate about mushrooms. Thanks for sharing your knowledge!
This has got to be one of the best channels regarding mushrooms and habitat on youtube. Adam is so intelligent and easy to listen to. The passion just bleeds through the screen and after every video I am revamped with a new energy to get outside and enjoy our beautiful planet.
Thank you! I hunted over 15 pounds of chanterelles this weekend in Virginia. They were delicious in risotto, and I plan to eat them everyday and dry some for winter!
I love mushrooms and would like to learn more. In addition to watching channels like this one is there anything you guys would recommend to bolster my knowledge?
Thanks for this video Adam. I just brought home some jacck o lanterns with reishei and puffballs. We didn't know what they were but they smelled really good as far a mushrooms go. Our plan was to identify after bringing them home and you helped out tremendously with this video. Thank you.
If I found a guy wearing earrings and walking around the woods swinging a wicker basket, I'd scoop him up, take him home and put him on my shelf. Lol. You are too cute!
In my opinion the difference between the two is pretty clear and you certainly touched on all of the differences. The first time I found a jack o lantern my first thought was that it was a chantrelle. Quickly it became apparent to me it wasn't. They are much larger, much more orange and a much larger cluster. Good job in explaining the differences. Thanks for these extremely informative videos.
Adam, you are still one of the BEST if not THE BEST source of information for all things Mycological!! This video was so helpful for me. I wanted to find a good in-depth comparison of the Chanterelle and the JackO'Lantern mushrooms and Voila! here it is! Thank you so much!
Thank you, I think you just saved me from a nasty experience. Jack o Lanten is here in Southwest France. My mushroom books never warned of this Chanterelle look alike.
Your a good speaker/teacher and always smiling your videos are a pleasure to watch Definitely doing what your meant to do and helping us so much. This is info we all should know. Lost knowledge I feel
Hi Adam, I absolutely love your course. Today I found the most beautiful chicken of the woods, milky caps, chanterelles, old man of the woods. Absolutely delicioous and amazing!! Once again, thankyou so much for your amazing great courses.
Dude thank you very much. I'm 32 and just learned about this miracle fungi. Never forged a mushroom before. Just stumbled on this video today to learn. Saw from 6 years ago, so i clicked on your page to see, and you have another great video from 3 hours ago! So thank you, I feel like I'm about to learn everything i need to know about foraging mushrooms while watching all of your videos.
This is fast becoming my favorite channel! Excllent videos, one after another. Great work, and thank you for sharing all your knowledge and passion for nature!
You did a great video ..very clear voice to ..thanks for to your video I have found a honey hole of chanterelles ..and finally tried some yesterday ate several cooked down with a gravy with no I'll effects thanks to your careful explaining
What I like most about Learn Your Land is the focus on safety. Thanks to these detailed videos I have been able to stay in the kitchen, and out of the bathroom! Learn Your Land has given me the confidence to eat all of the culinary treasures nature provides.
I just found some jack-o'-lanterns growing on old piece of firewood next to my wood pile I was hoping it was edible most definitely not thank you for this video
Long time mushroom eater (snacking on enoki and maitake right now), first time mushroom hunter... once this winter clears up. I can't say how glad I am I've found your channel, it's immensely informative. Good work, Adam.
Adam - I LOVE your energy, your enthusiasm and your super "smarts" for the mushrooms!! I just picked a bunch of Chanterelles in a forest in northwestern Oregon yesterday with my son (and it's mid-September). It was my first time, but he has picked them in the same spot for years. He may know about the Jack O'Lanterns but never mentioned them. Maybe it's because he has always picked in the same area for so long. It's so good to be informed about something that looks like Chanterelles that should be avoided. Keep sharing your mushroom knowledge and THANK YOU for these great videos!!
Very helpful. I'm new to this, but I see a lot of Chanterelles in NE and I'm not always sure. This is the most helpful. See a lot of yellow/orange funnel shaped mushroom, growing individually. Mistrust often because I don't understand what a false gill is.
I have been an herbalist and wild-crafter for 20 years and have limited mushroom knowledge. This Winter/Spring/Summer I have harvested Chaga, Morels, Chicken of the Woods, Reishis and oysters with sound double checking (where I have had questions) from you and your videos! I think you and your lessons are fantastic! Thank You Very Much for sharing your knowledge! You Rock! Now, on to chantarelles!
Adam, Always great videos, with lots of useful info!!!! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I too ate the Jack-o-Lantern mushroom. I was mislead by a book called, "The Encyclopedia of Mushrooms". I have since thrown the book away, it had a photo of the Lack-o-lantern under the name "Amethyst Chanterelle". The mushroom I had was big bright brilliantly orange cluster of mushrooms, and it was exactly like your Jack-o-lantern mushroom in this video, joined at the base. Always, always keep some "Activated Charcoal" on hand. After eating some of the Jack-o-lantern mushroom, I found on the internet that it was a Jack-o-lantern and not a Chanterelle mushroom. I grabbed the Activated Charcoal and drank 2 large glasses of in over the course of the day, and was able to get through with minimal effects. Activate Charcoal is the first thing that they give for possible poisoning in the ER. I studied Activate Charcoal a few years back to understand all the hype there is about it, and was I glad! . . . . . . . . . . . . Yesterday, I found real Chanterelles, under an oak tree.
I'm up in canada and searched for this information and youtoube gave me this rendom video weeks later! THIS IS PERFECT! Thank you for taking the time to share this!
It has been a few years since I picked Chanterelles. Used to make a light gravy with them and serve it over rice. My brother ran a buying station over on the coast, the Pacific, were they are more prevalent. We also have a Chanterelle that has a spiky spore body, we call these Hedgehog mushrooms and generally fix them about the same as others. This little mushroom fetches a higher price the the regular Chanterelles, the biggest market for these and others is Japan We also have a mushroom that parasitizes other mushrooms, called the Lobster mushroom, the last one I found was nearly as large as volleyball. Buy the time they are ready to eat, they will have numerous worms growing in them, the bigger the mushroom the more of a chance to be able to get good worm free flesh. I have diced them into gravies, saute them butter, even french fried them. After watching your video, I think I am going to make trip over to the coast and pick me a small bucket full. for a dinner of rice and mushroom gravy. You are a bad influences, I am just shy my 70th, now I want to walk in the woods. I was in Japan in the 1970's and I ate my first Oregon grown mushrooms at a restaurant in Tokyo. //es//A Proud Honorable Disabled American Combat Veteran, 1967-1994, The Wild Lady in the Woods.
your the man, you know your information beyond a normal mushroom hunter, you put in time, effort and detail to your great high quality videos. Im in the Catskills of NY so we are close and all your mushrooms are ones I hunt or find around my parts. Love the channel. Thanks for the videos.
Oooh so excited I found some today in the Dawson Forest in Georgia! I was able to teach my fellow hikers about this because of your wonderful show! Yay!
Excellent video, Adam, very thorough and well organized! In France, we say that the chanterelle smells like mirabelles, the tiny yellow plums that are ripening at the moment.
We get chantrells out here in ORE in the fir @ hemlock forests. They seem to like ferns, oregon grape, and moss to grow in. Here is 2 tips if you find a big chanty stalk cut the stalk into 4 segments, go back there 2 weeks later and you will have 4 nice buttons growing on that stalk. Also if you don't know a area, get on a deer trail. The deer eat them and they will poop the spores out in their crap. Also if you find some look around because the spores sometimes float on the breeze. Look straight up and down the hill from a batch you just found. We have white ones too which I like better, probaly because I've ate so many yellow ones. Slightly different taste with whites.
Thank you Adam. Great information for anyone who actively looks for these delicacies every season. Personally I only pick morels and have been for decades. They are what I grew up with and know. However, I have been wanting to find a nice bag of chanterelles and have looked for them in the past. I have yet to find any. But, now armed with more information about them, I feel a little more confident that if I do get lucky enough to find some, I will be able to identify the correct mushroom. Thank you.
Your channel is wonderful. I picked a gallon bag of cinnabars growing under pines needles. Also found three different yellow chanterelle species in the same location.
Thank you. Very informative. I am in search of Jack O'Lanterns to photograph at night (glowing) and this helps a lot. You are very knowledgeable and have a friendly accessible delivery.
Good job Adam..as a new forager I studied jack o lantern and. Chanterelles exclusively.. happy to report that I know the difference and have many great meals of chanterelles...thanks, good stuff as always.
I just wanted to say thank you for your very informative and detailed instruction videos. I'm impressed with your attention to detail. I am 65 years old and only now beginning to think about searching for mushrooms. I live in Southern Brazil and I have noticed mushrooms here and there and I have decided to investigate Foraging for mushrooms and other wild edible plants. Again thank you
This is vital information as always! Great well presented information in this video, Thanks again for all the work you have done to provide us with this.
TY Very informative content. I live in Florida. There are not many experts that are sharing experience down here. The ones showing foraging videos are not experts.
I watched this video way tooo late , I was riding my dirt bike in the mountains today and I saw a big cluster of what I thought it was Chantellere mushrooms and when I got home I made a big pot of pasta with creamy mushrooms sauce I ate them all !! Thanks for the video fella
Your videos are such an informative but also delightful source for learning about mushrooms, thank you so much! I always watch your videos when I find a a new species I haven't ID'd/tried before. Wish you lived closer;-)
Young man, 'I really like you and what your doing. Your a fantastic teacher. Your video's are well done. You are very articulate which enhances your teaching ability. Your very easily understood. Your parents must have loved you very much because your well behaved with good mannerisms. I did not compliment you for you too stand up with a smile on your face dancing an Irish jig. I did this because you have an understanding, and a passion that most young folk do not possess. Thank you for showing me and the entire world your skills. Your work young sir is appreciated. Keep'em coming.
@@LearnYourLand Hey, would it be possible for you to create some media with all the edible and none edible plants including health / medical benefits from using such plants. Have you ever seen (GREENDEANS) UA-cam channel? He does wild edibles too and he has been around for a very long time. Check him out.
I can’t imagine anyone knowing much more than you do about mushrooms! I’m sure your kindness and humility won’t allow you to agree but, WOW! Just WOW! You truly amaze me with your knowledge and more so with your teaching skills. You are truly an amazing young man and I’m grateful for your time and help. All the best and happy hunting ~Lisa
Adam, thanks for sharing your extensive mushroom knowledge in such a straight forward way. You rock! I would love to go on a foray lead by you, you make mushroom hunting fun 😀
This particular Video on Chanterelles varieties is very nice..I appreciate the in depth clarity and how thoroughly he's Presenting...I was beginning to believe that many of the Chanterelles I'd found yesterday were false and unedible...so glad to have viewed this greatly informative video. TY👍🍄
Awesome and informative. I'm new to foraging, and found my first chants today. Thanks to your videos, and confirmation by fellow mycologists, I was able to identify them, safely, and with confidence. Thank You for sharing this information. Newbies, such as myself, depend on people like you to learn from.
New subscriber and forager from Maine. Thanks for the great video. Until now I've only been able to positively identify black trumpet... thanks to you, I will hopefully be able to add chanterelle!
you are a great teacher. Im upstate NY, hudson valley region, getting back into the forest hunting, now I wont have to lug 20 books around with me, I also love to photograph them, wish I knew how to send you some pics on boletus variety, we sit here and argue whos gonna try it. fun stuff!
Thank you! You helped me identify mushrooms growing in our backyard within minutes, and feel confident about determining the difference very quickly in the future. We didn’t have edible Chanterelles, so I’m very glad I confirmed!!
Found jacks for the first time this weekend and I can see how they could be confused. The patch I found was under a live oak tree and some were growing at the base (large cluster) but others were growing in smaller clusters away from the tree. TBH if you found smaller clusters when they were fairly young (therefore around the size of chanterelles) you could confuse them pretty easily. Having harvested a lot of chants here are the things I noticed: 1) size: they are way bigger than chants. The biggest chant I've ever picked might be 2 inches across - most are less than an inch - while some of the jacks I saw were easily 6 inches. 2) Clustering: Chants might be clusters of 2, rarely 3. Adam is saying 4-5 to cover his ass but I've hardly if ever seen that. The jacks on the other hand cluster like honey mushrooms 3) gills: jacks have "real" gills where the texture is different from the cap. 9:24 shows what I mean. 4) smell: Chants smell fruity like apricots or peaches. Jacks have that generic mushroom smell. 5) inside color: Jack 9:24 vs Chant 9:21
Adam, your videos are almost like crash courses, every second is jam packed with only the necessary information, and you do it with such ease. This is quality work!
These videos are terrific. My 30 year old son has become a mushroom hunter recently. I sometimes walk with him during his searches for mushroom "honey holes" as he calls them. Edible or in-edible it is fun to look for them. He is trying to train his dog to find the edible ones, so far this is a no go. The dog is more interested in following the chipmunks and squirrels.
I would love to know if it ever worked out for him lol.
@@M0053yfatesame
Ahahahah I love your family ❤
😂
Your one of the best at mushrooms, very good, I’m 72 and been hunting them over65 yrs- enjoy your videos very much , keep up the good work 😝👌🏽
I only have three years to catch up, I'm 69, so I hope I can sit down at you campfire some day... I am stone dumb about shrooms but I do use the medicinal varieties. I did cook a roast with some black morels once and it was among the best. I ate some false morels up in Michigan once, and as I over cooked and reached too high a temperature, the Hydrazine started blasting off in the skillet. These surely were the true False Morels, containing the chemical Hydrazine, also found in Rocket fuel. They are deadly, though you can eat them for years, ... then one day, THUD !
I’m not a big fan of eating mushrooms myself, but I have some chanterelles growing under the oak trees in my front yard. This video has given me the confidence to harvest them for the people I know who DO want to cook with them!
how were they?
as a Texan who just moved to the NE, you are a lifesaver. We don't know much about foraging anything but pecans
Thanks Adam. You helped me realize I found Jack-O-Lanterns. You're fun to watch. I can tell you are so passionate about mushrooms. Thanks for sharing your knowledge!
This has got to be one of the best channels regarding mushrooms and habitat on youtube. Adam is so intelligent and easy to listen to. The passion just bleeds through the screen and after every video I am revamped with a new energy to get outside and enjoy our beautiful planet.
Thank you! I hunted over 15 pounds of chanterelles this weekend in Virginia. They were delicious in risotto, and I plan to eat them everyday and dry some for winter!
I picked some in Devon, UK the other day and I too made a delicious risotto. I collected a one litre container full, but I wish I had 15 pounds worth!
Don't dry..they get real tough. Saute and then freeze.
Where in VA?
@@steezydan8543 They also lose the majority of their flavor when dried, I agree with the saute and freeze, in a vac bag t limit freezer burn.
@@jfrunn Yeah, very tough and chewy.
When are you publishing a field guide? I would definitely purchase one.
If you do I have 15k mushroom photos if you need any. Only problem I'm from western Canada.
Me too.
I love mushrooms and would like to learn more. In addition to watching channels like this one is there anything you guys would recommend to bolster my knowledge?
should do region-specific books, there could be lots of overlap which would make parts of each book already done.
@@GailMcmartin what part? I'm in southern Alberta, curious what guide you use
Thanks for this video Adam. I just brought home some jacck o lanterns with reishei and puffballs. We didn't know what they were but they smelled really good as far a mushrooms go. Our plan was to identify after bringing them home and you helped out tremendously with this video. Thank you.
If I found a guy wearing earrings and walking around the woods swinging a wicker basket, I'd scoop him up, take him home and put him on my shelf. Lol. You are too cute!
Gabriel Bennett You are too funny! 😀
Be weary of Gabriel Adam. We need you making videos, not on her witches shelf. Lol
haha! like!
😂😂😂
Now imagine a guy saying this about a woman.
In my opinion the difference between the two is pretty clear and you certainly touched on all of the differences. The first time I found a jack o lantern my first thought was that it was a chantrelle. Quickly it became apparent to me it wasn't. They are much larger, much more orange and a much larger cluster. Good job in explaining the differences. Thanks for these extremely informative videos.
Thanks for watching!
Adam, you are still one of the BEST if not THE BEST source of information for all things Mycological!! This video was so helpful for me. I wanted to find a good in-depth comparison of the Chanterelle and the JackO'Lantern mushrooms and Voila! here it is! Thank you so much!
Great video - very detailed. I really appreciate your time and effort.
Great video perfect for the season! Chanterelles are one of my favorites, reliable and easy to find, tastes great and easily identified.
Agreed!
Thank you, I think you just saved me from a nasty experience. Jack o Lanten is here in Southwest France. My mushroom books never warned of this Chanterelle look alike.
Adam, you are a real " fun guy"! Thanks for your well documented mushroom information.
Your a good speaker/teacher and always smiling your videos are a pleasure to watch
Definitely doing what your meant to do and helping us so much.
This is info we all should know. Lost knowledge I feel
Hi Adam, I absolutely love your course. Today I found the most beautiful chicken of the woods, milky caps, chanterelles, old man of the woods. Absolutely delicioous and amazing!! Once again, thankyou so much for your amazing great courses.
Thank you! We found a bunch of scattered chanterelles today and your video helped us confirm the ID! Delicious treat for dinner!!!
Thanks for this! I feel confident that I can go pick Chanterelles and not make a gastric mistake.
I see what u did there lol
Hi Adam, I just wanted to say thank you for sharing this video. Great information on identification. Thanks again.
Thanks Scott!
How refreshing to listen to a knowledgeable young person with a brain. An unusual phenomenon these days.
Wow! You're a captivating and informative teacher. Thank you for sharing this!
Dude thank you very much. I'm 32 and just learned about this miracle fungi. Never forged a mushroom before. Just stumbled on this video today to learn. Saw from 6 years ago, so i clicked on your page to see, and you have another great video from 3 hours ago! So thank you, I feel like I'm about to learn everything i need to know about foraging mushrooms while watching all of your videos.
This is fast becoming my favorite channel! Excllent videos, one after another. Great work, and thank you for sharing all your knowledge and passion for nature!
Thanks!
Excellent video again Adam. The differences between the two are so important to know, and your descriptions are superb.
You did a great video ..very clear voice to ..thanks for to your video I have found a honey hole of chanterelles ..and finally tried some yesterday ate several cooked down with a gravy with no I'll effects thanks to your careful explaining
What I like most about Learn Your Land is the focus on safety. Thanks to these detailed videos I have been able to stay in the kitchen, and out of the bathroom! Learn Your Land has given me the confidence to eat all of the culinary treasures nature provides.
Glad you're finding these videos helpful!
I just found some jack-o'-lanterns growing on old piece of firewood next to my wood pile I was hoping it was edible most definitely not thank you for this video
Long time mushroom eater (snacking on enoki and maitake right now), first time mushroom hunter... once this winter clears up. I can't say how glad I am I've found your channel, it's immensely informative. Good work, Adam.
Adam - I LOVE your energy, your enthusiasm and your super "smarts" for the mushrooms!! I just picked a bunch of Chanterelles in a forest in northwestern Oregon yesterday with my son (and it's mid-September). It was my first time, but he has picked them in the same spot for years. He may know about the Jack O'Lanterns but never mentioned them. Maybe it's because he has always picked in the same area for so long. It's so good to be informed about something that looks like Chanterelles that should be avoided. Keep sharing your mushroom knowledge and THANK YOU for these great videos!!
You are the best. Such informed knowledge delivered in a cool and easy style. Just love your vids Adam. Learning all the time. Thank you.
Thanks, Ann! I appreciate that.
You're so knowledgeable and explain these perfectly! Thanks so much!
You are very well spoken and explain things very well. I appreciate showing the difference between the two, especially for a beginner like me!
Very helpful. I'm new to this, but I see a lot of Chanterelles in NE and I'm not always sure. This is the most helpful. See a lot of yellow/orange funnel shaped mushroom, growing individually. Mistrust often because I don't understand what a false gill is.
I have been an herbalist and wild-crafter for 20 years and have limited mushroom knowledge. This Winter/Spring/Summer I have harvested Chaga, Morels, Chicken of the Woods, Reishis and oysters with sound double checking (where I have had questions) from you and your videos! I think you and your lessons are fantastic! Thank You Very Much for sharing your knowledge! You Rock! Now, on to chantarelles!
Adam, Always great videos, with lots of useful info!!!! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I too ate the Jack-o-Lantern mushroom. I was mislead by a book called, "The Encyclopedia of Mushrooms". I have since thrown the book away, it had a photo of the Lack-o-lantern under the name "Amethyst Chanterelle". The mushroom I had was big bright brilliantly orange cluster of mushrooms, and it was exactly like your Jack-o-lantern mushroom in this video, joined at the base. Always, always keep some "Activated Charcoal" on hand. After eating some of the Jack-o-lantern mushroom, I found on the internet that it was a Jack-o-lantern and not a Chanterelle mushroom. I grabbed the Activated Charcoal and drank 2 large glasses of in over the course of the day, and was able to get through with minimal effects. Activate Charcoal is the first thing that they give for possible poisoning in the ER. I studied Activate Charcoal a few years back to understand all the hype there is about it, and was I glad! . . . . . . . . . . . . Yesterday, I found real Chanterelles, under an oak tree.
I'm up in canada and searched for this information and youtoube gave me this rendom video weeks later! THIS IS PERFECT! Thank you for taking the time to share this!
It has been a few years since I picked Chanterelles. Used to make a light gravy with them and serve it over rice. My brother ran a buying station over on the coast, the Pacific, were they are more prevalent. We also have a Chanterelle that has a spiky spore body, we call these Hedgehog mushrooms and generally fix them about the same as others. This little mushroom fetches a higher price the the regular Chanterelles, the biggest market for these and others is Japan We also have a mushroom that parasitizes other mushrooms, called the Lobster mushroom, the last one I found was nearly as large as volleyball. Buy the time they are ready to eat, they will have numerous worms growing in them, the bigger the mushroom the more of a chance to be able to get good worm free flesh. I have diced them into gravies, saute them butter, even french fried them. After watching your video, I think I am going to make trip over to the coast and pick me a small bucket full. for a dinner of rice and mushroom gravy. You are a bad influences, I am just shy my 70th, now I want to walk in the woods. I was in Japan in the 1970's and I ate my first Oregon grown mushrooms at a restaurant in Tokyo.
//es//A Proud Honorable Disabled American Combat Veteran, 1967-1994, The Wild Lady in the Woods.
Thank You Adam for sharing your interesting and richly resourceful knowledge about so many wonderful things grow from the woodland!
Thank you for watching!
An awesome video to help distinguish between Chants & Jack's!! Thanks again, Adam!! I have found chants on my hikes this week.. and they were delish!!
your the man, you know your information beyond a normal mushroom hunter, you put in time, effort and detail to your great high quality videos. Im in the Catskills of NY so we are close and all your mushrooms are ones I hunt or find around my parts. Love the channel. Thanks for the videos.
Found a large patch this morning, and used this vid for great identification.
Thanks for what you do.
Hands down the best, most insightful and informative video I've seen showing the difference between the two mushrooms. You rock my world!
Thank you for watching!
How does anyone know way more than you? You're so knowledgeable and energetic. Thank you for your videos, really enjoying them from Oklahoma.
Youre the best Adam! Youve tought me so much. Ive found a lot of Chants this year and I love them... Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge!
Oooh so excited I found some today in the Dawson Forest in Georgia! I was able to teach my fellow hikers about this because of your wonderful show! Yay!
Excellent video, Adam, very thorough and well organized! In France, we say that the chanterelle smells like mirabelles, the tiny yellow plums that are ripening at the moment.
One of your best videos. Informative and detailed. Thanks.
Another awesome and informative video. Thanks for sharing your knowledge with everyone.
You're welcome, and thanks!
I'm a first year mushroom hunter in west central pa. your videos are very informative and have helped me i.d most of the mushrooms I've found
We get chantrells out here in ORE in the fir @ hemlock forests. They seem to like ferns, oregon grape, and moss to grow in. Here is 2 tips if you find a big chanty stalk cut the stalk into 4 segments, go back there 2 weeks later and you will have 4 nice buttons growing on that stalk. Also if you don't know a area, get on a deer trail. The deer eat them and they will poop the spores out in their crap. Also if you find some look around because the spores sometimes float on the breeze. Look straight up and down the hill from a batch you just found. We have white ones too which I like better, probaly because I've ate so many yellow ones. Slightly different taste with whites.
Thank you, Adam, for outlining the differences between these two fungi.
Thank you Adam.
Great information for anyone who actively looks for these delicacies every season.
Personally I only pick morels and have been for decades. They are what I grew up with and know. However, I have been wanting to find a nice bag of chanterelles and have looked for them in the past. I have yet to find any.
But, now armed with more information about them, I feel a little more confident that if I do get lucky enough to find some, I will be able to identify the correct mushroom.
Thank you.
One of the most informative videos seen so far. Thank you very Sir. Great video, hope you post more!!!
Your channel is wonderful. I picked a gallon bag of cinnabars growing under pines needles. Also found three different yellow chanterelle species in the same location.
Thank you. Very informative. I am in search of Jack O'Lanterns to photograph at night (glowing) and this helps a lot. You are very knowledgeable and have a friendly accessible delivery.
Good job Adam..as a new forager I studied jack o lantern and. Chanterelles exclusively.. happy to report that I know the difference and have many great meals of chanterelles...thanks, good stuff as always.
I followed your video and found chanterelles on a local trail near Oakridge, TN today. Awesome!
Great info, very thorough. Super well spoken as well. Thanks!
Good information. I harvested a nice bunch of chanterelle mushrooms this afternoon. Thanks for sharing.
Just picked my first chanterelles today! Thank you so much Adam for all your videos and information.
I just wanted to say thank you for your very informative and detailed instruction videos. I'm impressed with your attention to detail. I am 65 years old and only now beginning to think about searching for mushrooms. I live in Southern Brazil and I have noticed mushrooms here and there and I have decided to investigate Foraging for mushrooms and other wild edible plants. Again thank you
Good advice throughout here,thanks,most importantly going out with someone who knows what’s what is the most educational way of learning,spot on tip 👍
Excellent video, as always! I find them particularly helpful because I'm from central PA.
Thank you for that really detailed instructional video. This is extremely helpful. Great work on the video
This is vital information as always! Great well presented information in this video, Thanks again for all the work you have done to provide us with this.
You're welcome, and thank you!
EXCELLENT video! Very educational and informative. Thank you for your time and effort in making this.
Really appreciate your videos and wealth of knowledge Adam, Finding this channel has changed my life for the better!!
They are all over in MO now, you're enthusiasm is great!
This was awesome. You are a GREAT teacher! Love your enthusiasm.
TY Very informative content. I live in Florida. There are not many experts that are sharing experience down here. The ones showing foraging videos are not experts.
Thank you for all the good information. Really appreciated!!
Great video man! I am the one that talked to you at the gas station. I have to go look for some now! Great info and great video👍👍👍
I watched this video way tooo late , I was riding my dirt bike in the mountains today and I saw a big cluster of what I thought it was Chantellere mushrooms and when I got home I made a big pot of pasta with creamy mushrooms sauce I ate them all !!
Thanks for the video fella
Your videos are such an informative but also delightful source for learning about mushrooms, thank you so much! I always watch your videos when I find a a new species I haven't ID'd/tried before. Wish you lived closer;-)
Really well presented. Another way to identify Omphalatus is to look at the gills in Pitch Black. They're slightly phosphorescent.
Aww man, I've definitely got Jack-o-Lanterns! Thanks so much for the video, I learned a lot!!
Young man, 'I really like you and what your doing. Your a fantastic teacher. Your video's are well done. You are very articulate which enhances your teaching ability. Your very easily understood. Your parents must have loved you very much because your well behaved with good mannerisms. I did not compliment you for you too stand up with a smile on your face dancing an Irish jig. I did this because you have an understanding, and a passion that most young folk do not possess. Thank you for showing me and the entire world your skills. Your work young sir is appreciated. Keep'em coming.
Thanks for watching, James!
@@LearnYourLand Hey, would it be possible for you to create some media with all the edible and none edible plants including health / medical benefits from using such plants. Have you ever seen (GREENDEANS) UA-cam channel? He does wild edibles too and he has been around for a very long time. Check him out.
I can’t imagine anyone knowing much more than you do about mushrooms! I’m sure your kindness and humility won’t allow you to agree but, WOW! Just WOW! You truly amaze me with your knowledge and more so with your teaching skills. You are truly an amazing young man and I’m grateful for your time and help. All the best and happy hunting ~Lisa
That was awesome - you’re an wonderful and easy person to learn from. Thank you, thank you, thank you 😊
So very thorough! Thank you! If you are not a teacher, you should be one!
Adam, thanks for sharing your extensive mushroom knowledge in such a straight forward way. You rock! I would love to go on a foray lead by you, you make mushroom hunting fun 😀
Thank you so much. You do a wonderful job at informing people.
Awesome Video - Really clear and concise - Great Work !
You are the best! Thanks for all your educational videos 👍
This particular Video on Chanterelles varieties is very nice..I appreciate the in depth clarity and how thoroughly he's
Presenting...I was beginning to believe that many of the Chanterelles I'd found yesterday were false and unedible...so glad
to have viewed this greatly informative video. TY👍🍄
You make my Bike Rides into the Best Adventures 🏞️🍄🚴♂️ You're a True King 👑
Very informative and you made a great study showing difference between the two types of mushrooms, thank you so much.
Awesome and informative. I'm new to foraging, and found my first chants today. Thanks to your videos, and confirmation by fellow mycologists, I was able to identify them, safely, and with confidence. Thank You for sharing this information. Newbies, such as myself, depend on people like you to learn from.
New subscriber and forager from Maine. Thanks for the great video. Until now I've only been able to positively identify black trumpet... thanks to you, I will hopefully be able to add chanterelle!
you are a great teacher. Im upstate NY, hudson valley region, getting back into the forest hunting, now I wont have to lug 20 books around with me, I also love to photograph them, wish I knew how to send you some pics on boletus variety, we sit here and argue whos gonna try it. fun stuff!
One of the best mushroom videos I've seen. Thanks for the info.
Thanks Adan another great video ! I picked my first Chanterelle mushrooms this year! Didn't see any Jack-o-Lanterns as I picked to compare. .
Great video! I love how clear and well explained the differences are between these two mushrooms! Thank you:-)!
Thank you! You helped me identify mushrooms growing in our backyard within minutes, and feel confident about determining the difference very quickly in the future. We didn’t have edible Chanterelles, so I’m very glad I confirmed!!
I found a red-cinnabar chanterelle. So pretty! I've learned so much from your videos. Have a blessed day!
Found jacks for the first time this weekend and I can see how they could be confused. The patch I found was under a live oak tree and some were growing at the base (large cluster) but others were growing in smaller clusters away from the tree. TBH if you found smaller clusters when they were fairly young (therefore around the size of chanterelles) you could confuse them pretty easily. Having harvested a lot of chants here are the things I noticed:
1) size: they are way bigger than chants. The biggest chant I've ever picked might be 2 inches across - most are less than an inch - while some of the jacks I saw were easily 6 inches.
2) Clustering: Chants might be clusters of 2, rarely 3. Adam is saying 4-5 to cover his ass but I've hardly if ever seen that. The jacks on the other hand cluster like honey mushrooms
3) gills: jacks have "real" gills where the texture is different from the cap. 9:24 shows what I mean.
4) smell: Chants smell fruity like apricots or peaches. Jacks have that generic mushroom smell.
5) inside color: Jack 9:24 vs Chant 9:21
Great video filled with clear and understandable information! Looking forward to more from you.