12 Wild Foods You'll Want to Forage This Fall! Lion's Mane, Chicken of the Woods Mushroom
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- Опубліковано 8 вер 2022
- There is a 12 Wild Edible / Medicinal Mushrooms you need to know for survival in Late Summer / Fall.
Foraging Honey Mushrooms, Lion's Mane, Indigo Milk Cap, Black Walnuts, Hickory Nuts, and Chicken of the woods. Wild food identification and benefits. Wild Edibles Walk in the Appalachian Mountains and Bushcraft Skills. Wild crafting in Asheville in western North Carolina. Bushcraft / Survival Skills.
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Did i just watch a WHOLE darn video on mushrooms? Secretly...want more lol
Didn't know I was going to learn so much about mushrooms. I Love it! Very interesting 😃
Thank you for this video! It's concise and clear. I live near the Triangle area and see all sorts of mushrooms on the 6 acres we have. Never felt confident in identifying and harvesting them, the more I read the more confusing it tends to get, but this had the opposite effect!
Check your local laws. In the UK Lion’s Mane is a protected species in the wild.
How does that make sense? You're not removing the fungus when you harvest a mushroom. You're taking the fruiting body. If anything, that helps spread the spores around.
Government ignorance at its finest
i would not be suprised if fucking oxygen is protected there and need a permit for breathing
@Mae Mae well i dont
Well as long as you don't poison their growth medium they should be fine, I've taken one brick of lion's mane in sawdust and made it into at least 3 separate functional lion's mane fungi assuming it was actually lion's mane
Yass!! More!!!❤❤❤❤❤
Be safe always
Thanks for sharing your knowledge!
It is awesome to see you still working your magic!
Thank you a lot of great information here keep them coming
I have indigo milk caps growing around my mailbox. Their flavor is... interesting.
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@@ylstorage7085 It's like eating a paste made from crushed pine needles and black pepper😬
Thank you for the cohesive comprehensive precise summary of N Carolina mycelium fruition. I'll be heading to N C. By November no doubt from sunny California and I look forward making your acquaintance once I'm there. I've got folks in Brevard.
Anyways thanks for all of this important information.
Mike
Los Angeles Ca
Will share
I am in Morganton and wish I knew more about the mushrooms as my hubby loves them. Me not so much but I am willing to learn.
Why wish? Learn.
Thanks for all this information!! Another month here in Michigan I’ll be looking for hens of the woods!!!
I was skeptical that old man of the woods could taste as bad as they say... it pretty much does
They are enjoyable to E.
❤❤❤❤❤🍄🍄🍄🍄🍄
thanks for the great video and information! here in Canada just driving north of Toronto not far I am finding tons of the indigo milk caps right now.
been wondering if a chef or restaurant might buy these after I seen a few nice videos and dishes
Great, but wich one of them can we also smoke? 😅
What guide book do you use?
God bless you
Saw some lions mane in the woods two weeks ago, took the same walk a few days ago and literally all of it had been picked. No remnants whatsoever. Ecofascism sounding better every day
The mycelium in the tree will still be intact and it will most likely fruit again the next year. Also harvesting mushrooms and walking around with them spreads the spores
8:56 I know you recycled this footage,, but the first time I saw it, I couldn't help but wonder "why the heck is he swinging a hatchet through a chicken mushroom onto a wooden cutting board?"
Why?
I know I'm not the only person that cringes at that 🤣
Great video
Haha I only use Hatchets on thick mushrooms like chicken of the woods and Chaga. Maybe a cleaver or a thicker knife would be more appropriate