Returning to the introductions of the sensation of wild mushroom foraging from the article Fungophobe or Fungophile, meet the king of the fungi kingdom, the Bolete. The King Bolete, Boletus edulis, is ...
Max Walton and Wade Watkins climbed the dense and soggy slopes of Chugach National Forest near Ingram Creek on Tuesday. Though the Anchorage men moved slowly around stumps and through thick brush, ...
The “Spring King” (Boletus rex-veris) can be found in conifer forests in the mountains above 3,000 feet, in areas where the snow has melted a few weeks earlier. Fred M. Rhoades Courtesy to The ...
GRANITE FALLS -- Chanterelles and morels carry culinary cachet, but those who seek edible wild mushrooms in Washington will tell you there are many others out there as pleasing to the palate.
A few months from now, the monsoon-soaked sky islands of Southern Arizona will erupt into a spongy, white-capped wonderland. And the mushroom man will be there. Tucson resident Hernán Castro said he ...
Mushroom season should be starting to wind down in the High Country about now, though finds of edible boletes spurred by rains and warm temperatures were reported last week. The big, prized king ...
With the first soaking rains of autumn, mycophagists (mushroom eaters) all over the Northern Hemisphere begin drooling in anticipation of the king bolete harvest. Up to Thanksgiving, these large fungi ...
Mushrooms abound on the eastern flank of Owl Creek Pass in Western Colorado in early August, particularly after an unusually rainy summer. Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria), the infamous and deadly red ...