

Pinguicula species



This plant is sticky and traps bugs for food







Bomarea sp. aff. hirsutella (Alstromeriaceae)

















Dibaeis baeomyces







Melastiza & Psilocybe zapotecorum











Aleuria aurantia







with Lacrymaria lacrymabunda







Lacrymaria lacrymabunda











Postia caesia







Amanita yema





















Boletus edulis











Psilocybe muliercula



The first record of this species from Oaxaca























Psilocybe zapotecorum















Spathulariopsis velutipes















Amanita sp-m20











Psilocybe zapotecorum



For sale











Pholiota polychroa











Deconica coprophila







Hypomyces lactifluorum







with host mushroom Russula brevipes







Cortinarius bibulus



Growing with alder







[img]http://mushroomobserver.org /images/960/241898.jpg [/img]







Habitat







Asterophora parasitica















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Wow, some very cool and interesting finds Alan!



That Pholiota is particularly cool. Is that a mutant P. muliercula?



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" R e a l i t y l e a v e s a l o t t o t h e i m a g i n a t i o n " ~ J o h n L e n n o n



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Awesome! Love the mexican P. polychroa! I've never found that growing terrestrially. The Cortinarius bibulus and Spathulariopsis are cool as hell.



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Listen to my music

Here



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Great pics Alan! It looks like they pin raped those ones for sale.



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Quote:

Great pics Alan! It looks like they pin raped those ones for sale.







and some of the mature ones look a little over mature, fantastic shots!



I have never seen lobsters that look so pristine.

Quote:

Psilocybe muliercula



The first record of this species from Oaxaca







Awesome discovery!



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loving the orchids and Pholiota.





peace and love

bloodworm



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Holy shiiiiiit!!! These are some really great photos, Alan. Very nicely done. I would have mistaken that Psilocybe muliercula for a Hypholoma if I didn't see the bluing. The flowers are stunning.



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Rod Tulloss said:



The bulb is the bulb.



The volva is the volva.



They have a very long term realtionship, but they’re “just friends.”



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Great stuff as usual Alan!



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Added to the list of psilocybe mushrooms from Oaxaca, excellent work Alan!



"Psilocybe muliercula



The first record of this species from Oaxaca"





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~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ***Psilocybin Mushrooms*** ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

_________A Practical Guide To Psilocybin Mushrooms_________

"Think about the species, not your scale". -NeoSporen

"Mr. Joust, I see you don't actually partake in the psilocin, but it looks like it may partake in you!" -Gojira







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Quote:

ambc said:

Quote:

Great pics Alan! It looks like they pin raped those ones for sale.







and some of the mature ones look a little over mature, fantastic shots!



I have never seen lobsters that look so pristine.

Quote:

Psilocybe muliercula



The first record of this species from Oaxaca







Awesome discovery!









i know eh those are the finest lobbies ive ever seen!!



those zapo shots are the shit!!



stellar job Alan!!



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Awesome!!!



Somebody with some space in their gallery want to make a thumbnail of this for nomination?



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well if he found it there and hes the first in that area, its now a Psilocybe zapotecorumalleni haha! Just kidding guys.



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No Ideas Towards My Recent Active Seizures, There Nothing But Trouble.



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Quote:

TimmiT said:

Is that a mutant P. muliercula?







Probably not, it's a P. muliercula with an interesting growth form. Mutants are genetically different.



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Kokanee Shroom said:

It looks like they pin raped those ones for sale.







Yes, perhaps so other hunters wouldn't find them.



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ambc said:]

and some of the mature ones look a little over mature







None are over-mature, the mature ones are about right. They can even get quite a bit larger than that when conditions are good. Over mature ones look like big chunky Cortinarius.



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I have never seen lobsters that look so pristine.









They were only pristine on the outside, when I cut into it there were many bugs.



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Awesome discovery!







When I found it I thought it was P. caerulescens. It wasn't until I left the collection in the herbarium in Xalapa and Gaston Guzman's henchmen scoped it that its true identity became known.



After going back and looking at the pictures, it was pretty obvious that it was P. muliercula due to the gills which don't turn purple until the mushroom is very mature.



Quote:

Ran-D said:

Somebody with some space in their gallery want to make a thumbnail of this for nomination?







You can turn any MO photo into a thumbnail by changing the /640/ or /960/ into a /320/.



The reason I waited until February to make this thread is there is no way these pics could compete with VJP's Cordyceps or The Thinker's Schizophyllum commune shots. I hope to take some shots of this quality this year - I just ordered the same external flash that The Thinker has. (Neewer TT560)



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Beatiful photos of unique mushrooms!



Quote:

Alan Rockefeller said:

The reason I waited until February to make this thread is there is no way these pics could compete with VJP's Cordyceps or The Thinker's Schizophyllum commune shots. I hope to take some shots of this quality this year - I just ordered the same external flash that The Thinker has. (Neewer TT560)







Thats funny! Hmmm the TT560 huh...



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Yea but I want an enlargeable Shroomery thumbnail...



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I cant wait for the day i can get some zapotecorum spores, even the name is awesome!

love the immature specimen shot of the bluing.





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~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ***Psilocybin Mushrooms*** ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

_________A Practical Guide To Psilocybin Mushrooms_________

"Think about the species, not your scale". -NeoSporen

"Mr. Joust, I see you don't actually partake in the psilocin, but it looks like it may partake in you!" -Gojira







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I nominated that one for you Ran-D, I think this is right: http://www.shroomery.org/forums/ showflat.php/Number/17733469/vc/1 #17733469



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Coltricia sp.







Amanita flavoconia group







Gloeophyllum mexicanum



















Ramaria stricta with parasite











Lentinus velutinus







Panaeolus papilionaceus















Tremellodendropsis sp.











Hydnum umbilicatum







Amanita fallax







Amanita section Lepidella











Ramaria sp.



From San Mateo Rio Hondo, the next town over







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Enjoyed the Ramaria stricta with parasite but I do not know any ramaria parasites. I will have to start researching.



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I don't know what it is either. I have a herbarium specimen and there are micrographs on MO.



The sesame-seed like dots are interesting.







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Look at how close to flesh colored that Pinguicula is. I bet it's one of those plants that mimics the look of rotting flesh to attract insects.



How is the edibility of Psilocybe Zapotecorum? It must taste at least decent for them to collect so many.



The landscape shots of those hills are really nice.



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Quote:

nooneman said:

Look at how close to flesh colored that Pinguicula is. I bet it's one of those plants that mimics the look of rotting flesh to attract insects.







Flesh colored? I am not aware of any green or purple people.



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How is the edibility of Psilocybe Zapotecorum? It must taste at least decent for them to collect so many.







It has a slightly spicy odor/taste, different from other Psilocybe species.



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The landscape shots of those hills are really nice.







Thanks!



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Well, I'm color blind so don't trust me



The leaves at the base really don't look flesh colored at all? Man.



Edited by nooneman (02/04/13 05:54 AM)



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They are green.



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Quote:

They were only pristine on the outside, when I cut into it there were many bugs.







Tragically hilarious, just about every one i find in Oregon has little bug bites, holes and trenches, etc... but i cut em open and they are perfect inside! I guess it's only right that one that looks so beautiful on the outside is genuinely infested on the inside.



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Quote:

Alan Rockefeller said:

























I wanna live in mexico, without losing my kidney to the cartel.



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Trippin with no maps.



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