Foraging for Beginners, Episode 3, Part 1. Wild Mushrooms.
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- Опубліковано 2 жов 2024
- In this video Marlow presents roughly 20 species of mushrooms and rules that will give you a lot more safe edible fungus to forage for as a beginner :)
REMEMBER: if you are not 100% sure of what you have found the do not eat it!
Please also watch our foraging rules video here to see what you should and shoudn't do: • Wild Food UK Foraging ...
Pictures of the Scarletina Bolete which Marlow mentions in the video can be found here: www.wildfooduk...
All the other mushrooms mentioned in this video are shown in more detail in our online mushroom guide which can be found here: www.wildfooduk...
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You should be on TV fella , your videos are fantastic
Thanx very much :)
Very kind to do a whole hour for free! I learned so much
Thanx, you’re welcome :)
Marlow at his best once again. Can highly recommend both Wild food UK foraging books. Top drawer content
Thanx James :)
Fantastic content, I'm just going to purchase the book to help support your channel. I've been watching for a few years now and this has been my favourite so far particularly as most of the information and identification markers I remembered from your other videos, keeping it simple and safe as possible. Great work
Im a novice forgager and unfortunatly either havent had the time or money to attend a course but thanks to your videos and book I have sucessfully identified an consumed Chicken of the woods, Amethyst Decievers, Red Cracking Bolete, Wood Blewits,Golden Chanterelles and just last week Parasols! I hope to attend a course next year to learn more!
Glad to help :)
I'm in London so it's hard to get to any of your courses but also found your videos and books very helpful! We had fairy ring champignons in a biryani the other day❤
Such a great teacher Marlow. I love how you stay on topic for the absolute beginner essential knowledge.
Thank you, you always give clear information which is very helpful. I have learned a lot from you and got your book👍Got some Penny Bun this week and just came back from evening walk and got some Saffron Milkcap mushrooms. I'm going to add to my tea tonight
I allotment garden no dig between the woodchip and horse manure that's mulched over it I get a diverse display of fungi only 1s iv identified were shaggy inkcaps so far thanks for your knowledge
You’re welcome :)
Thanks Marlow, such a brilliant free guide. I've signed up to your patreon to help support the work you do.
You are so intelligent! Thank you for sharing your knowledge! 🎉
Great video, Marlow. Met you at Gary’s wedding at the weekend! Hope you’re well
These are very educational..wish I had your knowledge
Love your videos. Thank you so much for sharing all your hard earnt knowledge. Top Man!
Absolutely amazing video
BRILLIANT VIDEO MARLOW
Absolutely superb Marlow mushroomtastic infact 🍄🍄👍🏼🍺
Great watch
I dont know if i can attatch a picture here, but i think ive a specimine that beats the giat puffball record 😊
Always loved your videos Marlow , thank you
Hi there, does woods with sunlight that can reach the floor have more mushroom than the one that have a thick layer of tree that cover a lot of sunlight that makes the floor really dark and wet? Thank you, love all of your longer videos
2:09 Lilac Fibercap
8:08 Amethyst Deciever
13:07 Parasol Mushrooms
15:30 True Parsol
18:55 Shaggy Parsol
20:19 Slender Parasol
23:01 Cauliflower Fungus
25:35 Common Puffball
27:02 Earthball
28:17 Giant Puffball
31:17 Hedgehog Fungus
34:28 Shaggy Inkcap
34:52 Magpie Inkcap
38:07 Penny Bun
43:26 Devil's Bolete
46:40 Lurid Bolete
48:10 Brown Birch Bolete
52:25 Cracking Bolete
54:11 Peppery Bolete
55:59 Boletus Eater
57:04 Larch Bolete
1:00:53 Fleecy Milkcap
1:02:09 Beech Milkcap
1:03:05 Raspberry Milkcap
1:03:45 Orange Milkcap
1:08:26 Horn of Plenty
1:11:43 Elfin Saddle
Great video thanks
Thanx :)
Thank you Marlow. Painful to hear you dispense with the word "fungi" (even "funguses" would be something), but a great video, really interesting, really clear and helpful 😁
I always wonder if Termitomyces should be picked from roots or snap at surface. Their roots can be so deep rooted. Most of their stems are buried. I am aware Termitomyces is not found in UK or even Europe but I am so keen to taste them...
Can you eat it raw
Like put it in a blender with other fruits and veg's😊
Great video by the way 😊
No, I’d cook all wild mushrooms before eating.
Something about the picking vs cutting, pretty sure it's not advised to pull cauliflower fungus (and maybe certain others), and instead is better to cut it?
Good point. With the cauliflower yes cutting bits off is the best way, leave the rest to grow and go back a couple of days later to cut some more ;)
Marlow, how did you cook the Lurid Bolete in the end 😅?
How would you say beginner/intermediate/advanced/expert foragers are different? I've always been a bit unsure how to classify myself
I suppose it’s down to the number of species you can confidently id using the finer details rather than just rules and distinctive species. The blusher then the miller are probably 2 of the milestones. Blushers have more lookalikes than people think and the miller has many extremely toxic/deadly lookalikes.
Can't find a lot of proper identification videos on psilocybe cyanescens, or psilocybe semilanceata. Also 1 "occurrence" of cubensis in England.
They are class a drug in the uk, that is why.
There is liberty cap identification in Wild food uk book but you wont find Cyanescens in there as there techically not native an you need to find areas that typically imported American hard woods. There is no native Cubensis species in the UK