[pct-l] Dried meats and Cheese on Trail
Scott Williams
baidarker at gmail.com
Wed Jan 9 20:07:29 CST 2013
Hey MendoRider,
We were in Colorado in mountain spring and early summer and porcini is
usually a fall mushroom so we didn't hit mountain fall till the Winds.
They grow all over the Colorado Rockies, but later in the year. They are
a mycorrhizal mushroom that grows primarily with pines. If you've got a
pine forest then you've got a good chance you've got porcini. They produce
nutrients for the host tree and it provides sugars for the mushroom. The
opposite of a parasitic relationship. Once you find an area that produces,
you've found a "mother tree" and can revisit it for the rest of your life
at the right season. The mushroom plant underground can be as old as the
tree. I often pick chanterelles beneath 4 and 500 year old oaks and wonder
about the age of the mycelium producing them. Chanterelles are mycorrhizal
with oaks, manzanita, huckleberries and poison oak.
Shroomer
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