I literally have the same thought every time I watch Adam’s videos. I fucking love this guy, and it’s for way more than the mushrooms: Adam reminds me to be a good person. It’s harder and harder for me to love people, especially these days. So thank you Adam and everyone else spreading love and reminding us *how* to be good people. Cheers and blessings.
This exact thing happened to us last season. I took my 5 kids out hunting late season, because I had been working so much. I found a place with so many tulip trees. Within five minutes of getting out of the car, we found over 30 big morchella diminutiva. :) The kids were so excited. Thanks for the videos, Adam. You are like a walking dictionary. :) You're awesome!
Thank you Adam! Great to see you. Old apple orchards ? gee how many of us knew about lead/arsenic. Appreciate you sharing valuable ongoing information.
I know of a spot in Michigan in a floodplain with a very large sycamore. I have never found another spot quite as magical as that one. The were SEVERAL fairy rings (clusters of morels) all around it. It was hard to walk without stepping on one! I cannot remember any of the other trees, and sycamores are not common in that area.
I'm from northern Michigan, tree service and logging is a main industry for my area, this has to be one of the quickest, simplest, pre bud tree identification I've ever seen, coming from a rookie in a place of professionals, thank you!
Thank you this is fantastic for my tribe kiddos. We love our weekly straws in the forest. And since following you it has become even more like a treasure hunt.
Great video to get pumped up for the morel season, and a nice relaxing break from all the other stress-inducing news we have been inundated with the past few weeks! Thanks for the video!
Oddly enough, I was supposed to be out scouting tomorrow, but the weather doesn't look like it will cooperate. But, it's warm with a lot of moisture here in IN, so I think we are in for a good Spring!!! Thanks for checking in, Adam.
On the grandparent's homestead site there were 150 year old bing cherry matriarch trees. Every years morels would pop up under the branches. Always a good option for innoculating morel spore into orchards with cherries, apples, and pears.
@@Pucktechnology yellow morels grow in my yard under pines. Strange, but true. And they're delicious, large & meaty. Love them. I never dumped trimmings or wash water. I just noticed them one year after I moved in here and I felt privileged, like mother nature blessed me. Lololol
I was just out yesterday to start scouting early yesterday. This is my first true morel season and this video answered many of the questions I had. Great video, as always, and great timing. thanks
Hi Adam, so great to see your posts again! Last season there was no rain and we all got skunked. Side note, I went skiing with my family in the Poconos a few weeks ago, my first time in PA and everyone was so friendly. Cheers from Vermont
I live in South Carolina so our season starts very early, your videos help me try to find them and many other species as well. I thank you for posting these videos, they help a lot of people from all over the U.S. I have never found a morel..YET.. so hopefully this year will be the year ! I have 9 acres with 2 ponds old forest so maybe next fall .. I will plant a few more trees that attract morels ! Keep those videos rolling !
Always useful content, Adam. Despite lots of hiking I've only found one Morel spot. The spot produces Blacks between mid Apri to May 1st. This year I'm determined to find a jackpot. Thanks for the informative vids.
I'd pay to go on a hike with you any time. I live in eastern Ohio, just moved here from the California redwoods. I miss foraging so much! I need to learn about my new land.
I would love to, thanks for letting me know. I can't find anything on his website about trips in my area, but I've signed up for his online classes and I'm just waiting for them to come out. ua-cam.com/video/OE54NpooUls/v-deo.html
JD- Nice. We're all so proud to have uninformed xenophobes like you in our region. Also very happy to see that political trolls are getting away from FAUXnews and infecting UA-cam vids about nature for some strange reason. You're a credit to our area..... Not.
What do you use to protect yourself from the ticks? Love your videos they really help me out a lot. Tnx for always putting out great info on the mushrooms.
In Michigan we have always found morels in woods full of poppal (spelling??) trees, on hillsides, by deadfalls, around cherry trees (the pale morels love cherry!), and even in orchards.
I enjoy your content. I grew up in western PA but now live in SD. I wish there was someone making videos like yours for my area. Foraging is way different here in the Black Hills. I'm learning as I go. Have a great day.
I walked out in my backyard in Oklahoma, and picked a grocery bag full of white Morels. Some as big as my hand! We had to go buy a waist basket at the dollar store to soak them in! Tell people they have to soak them in salt water, to kill any bugs.
Love every video you make! Been looking for morels the past 6-7 years and last year found the most I have ever come across!! If your ever in the new river valley give me a shout and we will do some walking in the Woods!
I'm so ready for mushroom season!! I had acl surgery right at the beginning of the season last year. Best believe I went with my crutches lol ready to hit it hard this year 😂
My husband and I recently bought a 5 acre woods. We've been told it is a good morel woods and I am so excited to hunt there. I will definitely be checking soil temps! Thanks for the great information!
This is by far and away THE most informative morel edit I've ever seen in my life! Thank you! You've acquired a new sub w/ notifications on! Look forward to watching more!
Hi I'm Adam, I'm not going to find mushrooms. In fact I'm going to make one of my best videos ever and not find mushrooms. And now me, not the adam-me, is so psyched to go find morels, but not arsenic-lead laden ones. Dude! You are a genius. Seriously, you rocked it this time.
We found a new spot last season that was abundant. Now we're chomping at the bit to get out! Hopefully with the mild winter and warm weather we can start early. Thanks Adam!
Funny this video timing. I just checked my yellow morel patch (in my own yard, I'm super lucky to have them) yesterday. None peaking through the soil & grass yet. But with weather like it's been, shouldn't be much longer. I'm so ready to heat up the cast iron skillet for a plate full of these luscious treats.
I really enjoyed your presentation. Glad you brought up the lead/ arsenic problem with orchards. One poor guy in the New Jersey Mycological club would collect and dry huge amounts of morels that he would pick in an old orchard year after year. He ended up in the hospital with serious arsenic poisoning.
It's forecast to be 80°F in northeast Oklahoma today and it was just as warm yesterday. I'll be looking for blooming pawpaw trees (not for morels) next week after a wet spell comes through. There are hickory, elm and ash in the same area. And yes, it's probably a little early.
Thank you for the tips! I grew up in western PA, but have lived in NW Montana for the past 20 years. I sure miss all the different hardwood trees in PA! We have morels here too but they are more associated with wildfire areas. Happy hunting!
Awesome woodland you have there! We are headed out to the woods here in Missouri to scout around today too. So beautiful out there. Thank you for the mushroom hunting tips. We have happily joined your channel. Wishing you an amazing weekend ♡
My friend took some black morels to spore his property last season. He said only one was ever found in his town and a church goer crushed it. I can't remember the name of his town though.
The second spring hits in iowa is when they explode out of the ground by the hundreds in my grandmas apple orchard each year I collect enough to fill 4 1gallon ziplock bags
Living in Southwest Virginia we have pure stands of eastern red cedar stands in many areas that were formerly used as grazing areas for sheep or cattle. I have consistently found the Morcella variety in those where the cedars are more mature.
I'm going to check areas around the Spring fire a couple of years ago. The fire was stopped around large Aspen groves because of the water they hold, but often the trees died later because of the heat. Other research I've done suggests recent burn sites are good Morel foraging areas, and they grow around many poplar species, including Aspen and Cottonwood (as well as Tulip Poplar). Thanks for another great video, Adam.
I bet people would love a video about mushrooms that can help with your immune system right now. I know I’ve had plenty of people ask me questions already in the midst of this chaos. They know I took your class and know a lot about mushrooms now. I have gone through the medicinal mushrooms portion and learned how to make tinctures thanks to you! Thank you for all you do, Adam! =)
Thanks for all these tips, Adam. Gives me extra incentive to go visit my brother on his 200-acre farm in Southeastern Ohio where there is a large grove of tulip poplar trees.
Thanks much for the tips! Though I went out back and didn't find anything, my husband came back from a walk and asked if I'd seen "that one mushroom." Sure enough, it was a yellow morel at the base of a tulip poplar! He only recognized it from looking over my shoulder watching your videos. BTW, he and two of the kids tried it and were pleasantly surprised at how good it tasted. (we're in South Carolina)
Amazing video! Thank you for sharing what you know! In southern Indiana I had amazing luck finding yellow morel mushrooms under sycamores, to the point any large sycamores I saw I found giant morels underneath! I believe that the regular shedding of the bark helps supply yearly nutrients to yellow morels...never found any other morels underneath though!
We have a lot of old growth Tulip Poplar trees on our property, and we are surrounded by wet land. I have never seen a morel mushroom on my property. I will keep looking. I did find some pink club mushrooms, and they were in really good shape. I usually don't eat many mushrooms that I find, but I ate these, and they were delicious.
Hi Adam, glad to see you again. Always look forward to your videos bud. I'm so looking forward to mushroom season again. About 5 weeks to go for us in Central Oregon.
Got me so excited about to go out and get those Morels soon and the Dryads Saddle consolation prize along with some other things,Adam! Always love your videos!
As always great informative video Adam!! Out here in Arkansas I find them under autumn olive bush and hickory and more than most Sycamore along stream beds. I too love doing videos on my finds and am still learning, I am getting pretty good with the morel stuff though now. Good luck this year man, love your facebook page too! We have communicated a few times regarding some unknowns I have found and you were always a great help, best mushroom videos on youtube here I feel. Stay safe and have a great week my friend
That's a lot of different trees that I don't use to see. Maybe that's why I don't usually find morels (and I do find a lot of other mushroom species). Anyway, I'll try again this year to see if I have luck. Thanks for sharing. 👍
I just have one of these species in Nova Scotia, and as he mentioned, most of our elms are dead, so I don't even see those often lol. I'll use that as my defense for why I can't find them.
Bro how do we hang out. I live in sharpsville pa. The last few years I’ve learned more from you than other outdoor channels combined. I love your channel, and appreciate all the time you spend researching and learning Latin. All the time you spend teaching. Thanks for what you do.
Terrific video Adam! I am always impressed by your knowledge & how you just rattle off those Genus & species names of trees, mushrooms, etc.. Now I have to go back & watch your video titled "9 Wild Edible Mushrooms You Can Forage This Spring". Thanks for your expertise & videos.... 👍👍🍄🍄
Listening to your voice play on UA-cam in my pocket. I never feel alone in the forest. I have a personal guide teaching in great detail on the very things I long to know. #GoalsToActuallyMeetYouInPerson
I’ve found morels only 2 times. Both time under apple trees. I wonder if you find them under fruit trees in general. 🤔 Thanks so much for the warning around homestead orchards. I’m in Northern California, no tulip trees. But we do have sycamore. Thanks for the tips.
Thanks again Adam. I find half free morels in hickory stands, consistently. Also There's one spot of open lawn I always find blacks and yellows, yet the only tree species around are sparsely distributed black oaks and red oaks, but I find the morels outside of their drip edges
What about the briers? People say if you aren’t digging through them or privet your not in them? Thanks for this awesome video. Loved the information given especially the part about the old Apple orchard.
I may need to look for morel mushrooms today, it was almost 80 degrees yesterday. We swing wildly with temperatures during the winter in Georgia. We rarely ever have a day when the temperatures don't rise into the 40s.
Going out today to look for oysters, been crammed in my house and really want to get a few lbs. Oh and this guy stepping his game up means the rest of us can have access to the knowledge. Dude amazing mang
Nice video Adam. One of my favorite trees to look for morels are the Cotton wood trees. The big tooth aspen trees are very good for the big yellow morels, the giant Eastern cottonwoods are good too, but the Quaking Aspen (white) trees don't seem to produce any.
There will never be a teacher equal to you. Your knowledge, cheer, and commitment to learning is unparalleled
Agreed
dude i love you, you beam of positivity
^this comment has more likes than his video has dislikes. This dude is amazing.
I literally have the same thought every time I watch Adam’s videos. I fucking love this guy, and it’s for way more than the mushrooms: Adam reminds me to be a good person. It’s harder and harder for me to love people, especially these days. So thank you Adam and everyone else spreading love and reminding us *how* to be good people. Cheers and blessings.
@@careyjamesmajeski3203 just an awesome human being
I agree. I just wish he was in my area.
This exact thing happened to us last season. I took my 5 kids out hunting late season, because I had been working so much. I found a place with so many tulip trees. Within five minutes of getting out of the car, we found over 30 big morchella diminutiva. :) The kids were so excited. Thanks for the videos, Adam. You are like a walking dictionary. :) You're awesome!
That sounda awesome! I can't wait to take my family out to the woods and get some!
Woo hoo! Adam's hunting morels. Spring is here!
SOOO glad that you brought up the lead arsenate issue under apple trees. No one knows about it. Keep up the awesome job. 👏
I could listen to you talk about mushrooms all day! Very informative!
You know so much about all of the trees and plants, it's amazing! Thank you very much for these videos.
Thank you Adam! Great to see you. Old apple orchards ? gee how many of us knew about lead/arsenic. Appreciate you sharing valuable ongoing information.
Every time I watch one of your videos I get excited about getting outside and into the woods. Keep up the good work. Love your enthusiasm.
Crazy, I search for morel hunting tips and find a guy who happened to be in a band with my cousin. Great video, dude. Very informative!
I find almost all my morels under sycamores here in central missouri I love it because you can see the white branches from a long ways away
As a fellow Missourian, I can attest to this
I know of a spot in Michigan in a floodplain with a very large sycamore. I have never found another spot quite as magical as that one. The were SEVERAL fairy rings (clusters of morels) all around it. It was hard to walk without stepping on one! I cannot remember any of the other trees, and sycamores are not common in that area.
So happy I stumbled onto your page.. So full of good information and the way you deliver it makes it easy to learn and remember. Thank you.
Love Love Love your Edu-hikes ! You show us what these trees and underbrush look like at the proper time of year, thanks so much Adam.
I'm from northern Michigan, tree service and logging is a main industry for my area, this has to be one of the quickest, simplest, pre bud tree identification I've ever seen, coming from a rookie in a place of professionals, thank you!
Thank you this is fantastic for my tribe kiddos. We love our weekly straws in the forest. And since following you it has become even more like a treasure hunt.
Great video to get pumped up for the morel season, and a nice relaxing break from all the other stress-inducing news we have been inundated with the past few weeks! Thanks for the video!
Oddly enough, I was supposed to be out scouting tomorrow, but the weather doesn't look like it will cooperate. But, it's warm with a lot of moisture here in IN, so I think we are in for a good Spring!!! Thanks for checking in, Adam.
Hoping to go down to Brown County next weekend to hunt for some morels in IN!
Such a gorgeous time of year to be outdoors👍 Morel hunting, Turkey hunting, and the Crappie bite is ON.
On the grandparent's homestead site there were 150 year old bing cherry matriarch trees. Every years morels would pop up under the branches. Always a good option for innoculating morel spore into orchards with cherries, apples, and pears.
Thank you,I had no idea how trees and mushrooms coexist!
Your teaching style is clear and super wonderful to understand.
Thanks for getting me all wound up Adam 🙂
I have morels growing in my yard every year, will be keeping my eyes open.
I have Elms but no morels 🙁
I don't have any elms, fir, pine, alder and red cedar.
@@Pucktechnology yellow morels grow in my yard under pines. Strange, but true. And they're delicious, large & meaty. Love them. I never dumped trimmings or wash water. I just noticed them one year after I moved in here and I felt privileged, like mother nature blessed me. Lololol
Thank you so much Adam! Always so kind and generous with your time 🙂🙂
I was just out yesterday to start scouting early yesterday. This is my first true morel season and this video answered many of the questions I had. Great video, as always, and great timing. thanks
I'm starting early this year because of a very mild winter and so far a warmer and wet spring.
Agreed
Was thinking the same
And your dang right. Its been on this week in East tennessee. A good 2 weeks early.
Did u find any
@@jakobsime4190 starting to dry up here
Hi Adam, so great to see your posts again! Last season there was no rain and we all got skunked. Side note, I went skiing with my family in the Poconos a few weeks ago, my first time in PA and everyone was so friendly. Cheers from Vermont
I live in South Carolina so our season starts very early, your videos help me try to find them and many other species as well. I thank you for posting these videos, they help a lot of people from all over the U.S. I have never found a morel..YET.. so hopefully this year will be the year ! I have 9 acres with 2 ponds old forest so maybe next fall .. I will plant a few more trees that attract morels ! Keep those videos rolling !
Always useful content, Adam. Despite lots of hiking I've only found one Morel spot. The spot produces Blacks between mid Apri to May 1st. This year I'm determined to find a jackpot. Thanks for the informative vids.
I'd pay to go on a hike with you any time. I live in eastern Ohio, just moved here from the California redwoods. I miss foraging so much! I need to learn about my new land.
Ethan Hoj They do day trips. Not sure if it's just with him, or with his mushroom club, but I know someone who went out on a field trip with him.
I would love to, thanks for letting me know. I can't find anything on his website about trips in my area, but I've signed up for his online classes and I'm just waiting for them to come out. ua-cam.com/video/OE54NpooUls/v-deo.html
Eastern Ohio woods are beautiful and lush. Welcome, you will love it here.
Get out there and look, best bet!
JD-
Nice.
We're all so proud to have uninformed xenophobes like you in our region.
Also very happy to see that political trolls are getting away from FAUXnews and infecting UA-cam vids about nature for some strange reason.
You're a credit to our area..... Not.
What do you use to protect yourself from the ticks? Love your videos they really help me out a lot. Tnx for always putting out great info on the mushrooms.
Thank you for the video - always impressed by your format. Especially thankful for the caution of harvesting morels in old apple orchards!
I'm so hyped. Morels=happiness.
Thanks for the tips, Adam! Morels should be out any day now in North Carolina.
In Michigan we have always found morels in woods full of poppal (spelling??) trees, on hillsides, by deadfalls, around cherry trees (the pale morels love cherry!), and even in orchards.
I enjoy your content. I grew up in western PA but now live in SD. I wish there was someone making videos like yours for my area. Foraging is way different here in the Black Hills. I'm learning as I go. Have a great day.
I walked out in my backyard in Oklahoma, and picked a grocery bag full of white Morels. Some as big as my hand! We had to go buy a waist basket at the dollar store to soak them in! Tell people they have to soak them in salt water, to kill any bugs.
Well, that's subjective as you don't "have to" soak them. A lot of people only rinse them because soaking them makes em soggy and takes away flavor.
Love every video you make! Been looking for morels the past 6-7 years and last year found the most I have ever come across!! If your ever in the new river valley give me a shout and we will do some walking in the Woods!
Yesterday I found False Morel. New find for me and was exciting to explore and learn something new in my area.
I'm so ready for mushroom season!! I had acl surgery right at the beginning of the season last year. Best believe I went with my crutches lol ready to hit it hard this year 😂
Your videography is simple and thoughtful. Your information is satisfying and useful. Thank you!
Thanks!
My husband and I recently bought a 5 acre woods. We've been told it is a good morel woods and I am so excited to hunt there. I will definitely be checking soil temps! Thanks for the great information!
You've read my mind! I'm looking forward to finding my first morels this year!
It's going to be a good year! Reports from the south say they have already started.
Weekend Warrior I’ve found lots in north Mississippi last few or so
This is by far and away THE most informative morel edit I've ever seen in my life! Thank you! You've acquired a new sub w/ notifications on! Look forward to watching more!
Hi I'm Adam, I'm not going to find mushrooms. In fact I'm going to make one of my best videos ever and not find mushrooms. And now me, not the adam-me, is so psyched to go find morels, but not arsenic-lead laden ones. Dude! You are a genius. Seriously, you rocked it this time.
Just found 3 to 4 lbs. in my woods in east Tennessee this evening in about a hour. About to get them ready to batter and fry, can't wait.
Love your videos my friend, looking forward to morel hunting. As always, you ignite the fire of foraging! Thank you, have a great day. Peace!
Always a pleasure learning from you Professor
We found a new spot last season that was abundant. Now we're chomping at the bit to get out! Hopefully with the mild winter and warm weather we can start early. Thanks Adam!
Funny this video timing. I just checked my yellow morel patch (in my own yard, I'm super lucky to have them) yesterday. None peaking through the soil & grass yet. But with weather like it's been, shouldn't be much longer. I'm so ready to heat up the cast iron skillet for a plate full of these luscious treats.
I really enjoyed your presentation. Glad you brought up the lead/ arsenic problem with orchards. One poor guy in the New Jersey Mycological club would collect and dry huge amounts of morels that he would pick in an old orchard year after year. He ended up in the hospital with serious arsenic poisoning.
It's forecast to be 80°F in northeast Oklahoma today and it was just as warm yesterday. I'll be looking for blooming pawpaw trees (not for morels) next week after a wet spell comes through. There are hickory, elm and ash in the same area. And yes, it's probably a little early.
I realized what a nerd i was, when i fell in love with this channel
great vid! Learn and love your land!
I have the alot fun in the scouting process and when I see a stand of elm trees it goes to a new level. Nice video as usual!
Thank you for the tips! I grew up in western PA, but have lived in NW Montana for the past 20 years. I sure miss all the different hardwood trees in PA! We have morels here too but they are more associated with wildfire areas. Happy hunting!
Yeah, here in Lancaster County, PA, I have a spot that produces the 3 species you mentioned, and it has large dead/dying black cherry trees in it.
Wow! Care to share? I live in Lancaster too!
@@johnblochberger6517 Ha ha, sorry. All I will say is that they are in a small woodlot 5 minutes from Ephrata.
@@nathanrupley oh well. worth a shot!
@@nathanrupley oh well. worth a shot!
I found a couple in my yard in Oregon yesterday. Early spring here.
Awesome woodland you have there! We are headed out to the woods here in Missouri to scout around today too. So beautiful out there. Thank you for the mushroom hunting tips. We have happily joined your channel. Wishing you an amazing weekend ♡
Morels are rare here in Maine, but here's hoping! Great video, as always, Adam. Your enthusiasm is contagious!
Hope you're having an awesome day Peter! Happy hunting!
@Tommy Salami LOL, not a bad idea. I have a losbterman in the family......
My friend took some black morels to spore his property last season. He said only one was ever found in his town and a church goer crushed it. I can't remember the name of his town though.
The second spring hits in iowa is when they explode out of the ground by the hundreds in my grandmas apple orchard each year I collect enough to fill 4 1gallon ziplock bags
Hey Adam great tym to find sheds also! No morels but lots of bone so far.
Thanks again for another fine video Adam. Thumbs up to you.
I just moved to Eastern PA and this helps so much!
Just an FYI adam I find all of your videos useful informative an entertaining
Thank you Adam. Nice way to start the day!
Adam, you are the man! Always interesting speaker.
Living in Southwest Virginia we have pure stands of eastern red cedar stands in many areas that were formerly used as grazing areas for sheep or cattle. I have consistently found the Morcella variety in those where the cedars are more mature.
Your channel is one of few that I view on regular speed (I don’t up the play speed to 1.25 - 1.50). Thanks for another informative video.
Tommy Salami YES! Yes! The southern drawl makes me wonder if I’ll die of boredom before they finish. 😂
I'm going to check areas around the Spring fire a couple of years ago. The fire was stopped around large Aspen groves because of the water they hold, but often the trees died later because of the heat. Other research I've done suggests recent burn sites are good Morel foraging areas, and they grow around many poplar species, including Aspen and Cottonwood (as well as Tulip Poplar). Thanks for another great video, Adam.
I bet people would love a video about mushrooms that can help with your immune system right now. I know I’ve had plenty of people ask me questions already in the midst of this chaos. They know I took your class and know a lot about mushrooms now. I have gone through the medicinal mushrooms portion and learned how to make tinctures thanks to you! Thank you for all you do, Adam! =)
Chaga is antiviral..among many other health benefits
Thanks for all these tips, Adam. Gives me extra incentive to go visit my brother on his 200-acre farm in Southeastern Ohio where there is a large grove of tulip poplar trees.
Thanks much for the tips! Though I went out back and didn't find anything, my husband came back from a walk and asked if I'd seen "that one mushroom." Sure enough, it was a yellow morel at the base of a tulip poplar! He only recognized it from looking over my shoulder watching your videos. BTW, he and two of the kids tried it and were pleasantly surprised at how good it tasted. (we're in South Carolina)
Amazing video! Thank you for sharing what you know! In southern Indiana I had amazing luck finding yellow morel mushrooms under sycamores, to the point any large sycamores I saw I found giant morels underneath! I believe that the regular shedding of the bark helps supply yearly nutrients to yellow morels...never found any other morels underneath though!
We have a lot of old growth Tulip Poplar trees on our property, and we are surrounded by wet land. I have never seen a morel mushroom on my property. I will keep looking. I did find some pink club mushrooms, and they were in really good shape. I usually don't eat many mushrooms that I find, but I ate these, and they were delicious.
Hi Adam, glad to see you again. Always look forward to your videos bud. I'm so looking forward to mushroom season again. About 5 weeks to go for us in Central Oregon.
Here in the Midwest we find morels under Sycamores. I hunt on the Mississippi River, island hopping.
Thanks I don’t always watch but I always enjoy when I do ! “Great video” !!
Got me so excited about to go out and get those Morels soon and the Dryads Saddle consolation prize along with some other things,Adam! Always love your videos!
❤️🍄❤️🍄❤️🍄❤️so excited for this season of foraging! ❤️🍄❤️🍄❤️🍄
As always great informative video Adam!! Out here in Arkansas I find them under autumn olive bush and hickory and more than most Sycamore along stream beds. I too love doing videos on my finds and am still learning, I am getting pretty good with the morel stuff though now. Good luck this year man, love your facebook page too! We have communicated a few times regarding some unknowns I have found and you were always a great help, best mushroom videos on youtube here I feel. Stay safe and have a great week my friend
That's a lot of different trees that I don't use to see.
Maybe that's why I don't usually find morels (and I do find a lot of other mushroom species).
Anyway, I'll try again this year to see if I have luck.
Thanks for sharing. 👍
I just have one of these species in Nova Scotia, and as he mentioned, most of our elms are dead, so I don't even see those often lol.
I'll use that as my defense for why I can't find them.
@@KendrickMan It's a good defense :)
@@FindInNature oops, i didnt include apple trees. eroding my own defense here
Bro how do we hang out. I live in sharpsville pa. The last few years I’ve learned more from you than other outdoor channels combined. I love your channel, and appreciate all the time you spend researching and learning Latin. All the time you spend teaching. Thanks for what you do.
Thanks for the tips!! I’ve only found yellow morels and only under one giant sycamore in the woods behind my house.
My favorite mushroom to hunt. I always find them after the first warm rain in spring. I've hunted in Maryland, Pennsylvania & West Virginia.
Terrific video Adam! I am always impressed by your knowledge & how you just rattle off those Genus & species names of trees, mushrooms, etc.. Now I have to go back & watch your video titled "9 Wild Edible Mushrooms You Can Forage This Spring". Thanks for your expertise & videos.... 👍👍🍄🍄
Very informative and never heard about the potential toxicity of old apple orchards. Thnx!!!
Listening to your voice play on UA-cam in my pocket. I never feel alone in the forest. I have a personal guide teaching in great detail on the very things I long to know. #GoalsToActuallyMeetYouInPerson
Great tree info & good timing too! Thanks.
I’ve found morels only 2 times. Both time under apple trees. I wonder if you find them under fruit trees in general. 🤔 Thanks so much for the warning around homestead orchards. I’m in Northern California, no tulip trees. But we do have sycamore. Thanks for the tips.
Thanks again Adam. I find half free morels in hickory stands, consistently. Also There's one spot of open lawn I always find blacks and yellows, yet the only tree species around are sparsely distributed black oaks and red oaks, but I find the morels outside of their drip edges
They're early this year. Get ready. Ive picked a wheelbarrow load already in East tennessee.
I will definitely keep my eyes open here in New England hopefully have some luck , love the video great information I learned a lot
Wow there was a tone of wild violet there. One of my favorite wild edibles.
What about the briers? People say if you aren’t digging through them or privet your not in them? Thanks for this awesome video. Loved the information given especially the part about the old Apple orchard.
I may need to look for morel mushrooms today, it was almost 80 degrees yesterday.
We swing wildly with temperatures during the winter in Georgia.
We rarely ever have a day when the temperatures don't rise into the 40s.
Good information for folks. Merle is always scoutin’ for new spots.
Going out today to look for oysters, been crammed in my house and really want to get a few lbs. Oh and this guy stepping his game up means the rest of us can have access to the knowledge. Dude amazing mang
Thank you for all the information on mushrooms, I hope to find a few this year, hope you find many also.
Nice video Adam. One of my favorite trees to look for morels are the Cotton wood trees. The big tooth aspen trees are very good for the big yellow morels, the giant Eastern cottonwoods are good too, but the Quaking Aspen (white) trees don't seem to produce any.