Free: Contests & Raffles.
Its starting in my areas, found 50 this am, mostly smaller, but in good groupings. Todays rain and coming warmer weather should make for a productive next couple weeks. Update, Today we picked for about 4 hours, ended up with almost 800. This was a personal best day for us on non fire area morels. Liked this "conjoined" one. 2 heads, 1 root. It's going to be an epic year as we haven't even checked our best areas yet.
Quote from: SuperX on May 06, 2024, 02:29:31 PMI had no idea we had sooty grouse in WA! Very cool... are they protected or lumped in under 'grouse'?They're lumped into "blue grouse" with Dusky as well. My daughter and I found TWO whole morels on Friday on the E side... hope this rain produces some more for this week. Anyone know for how long a burn will typically produce for?
I had no idea we had sooty grouse in WA! Very cool... are they protected or lumped in under 'grouse'?
@kellama2001 Southern facing slopes, fairly open, 3300’, found a lot under buck brush(ceanothis sp.?) and willows.
Quote from: mcrawfordaf on May 06, 2024, 02:32:19 PMQuote from: SuperX on May 06, 2024, 02:29:31 PMI had no idea we had sooty grouse in WA! Very cool... are they protected or lumped in under 'grouse'?They're lumped into "blue grouse" with Dusky as well. My daughter and I found TWO whole morels on Friday on the E side... hope this rain produces some more for this week. Anyone know for how long a burn will typically produce for?It's my understanding the first year after a burn is the best, then it goes down hill, sometimes rapidly after that. You should expect more than usual in a burn for up to 5 years though. To expand on NOCK NOCK's observations, the last few years hunting in burns in the Methow, I found most of my mushrooms where fire had burned buck brush. They were thick around and under scorched buck brush plants and along roads or cut fire lines where machines had broken the ground. South facing, semi open to sometimes very open.
Quote from: 7mmfan on May 06, 2024, 03:20:54 PMQuote from: mcrawfordaf on May 06, 2024, 02:32:19 PMQuote from: SuperX on May 06, 2024, 02:29:31 PMI had no idea we had sooty grouse in WA! Very cool... are they protected or lumped in under 'grouse'?They're lumped into "blue grouse" with Dusky as well. My daughter and I found TWO whole morels on Friday on the E side... hope this rain produces some more for this week. Anyone know for how long a burn will typically produce for?It's my understanding the first year after a burn is the best, then it goes down hill, sometimes rapidly after that. You should expect more than usual in a burn for up to 5 years though. To expand on NOCK NOCK's observations, the last few years hunting in burns in the Methow, I found most of my mushrooms where fire had burned buck brush. They were thick around and under scorched buck brush plants and along roads or cut fire lines where machines had broken the ground. South facing, semi open to sometimes very open.Agreed. Usually only the first year after a fire for us. 2015ish was a big fire in upper Entiat, next year you couldn't step without crushing a morel, the next year we found zero in same areas. I find good morel production has more to do with weather/temperature/sunlight/moisture, and the right sequence of those leading up to their fruiting season, than anything else.
Burns and REALLY REALLY OLD foreat areas with rotting logs and deep organic matter from those logs. Areas of the forest that were logged a millenia ago and have old stumps with buck board notches still showing produce well also. Deep in the bottoms where old cedar stumps tower over you.
Quote from: LDennis24 on May 07, 2024, 06:50:57 AMBurns and REALLY REALLY OLD foreat areas with rotting logs and deep organic matter from those logs. Areas of the forest that were logged a millenia ago and have old stumps with buck board notches still showing produce well also. Deep in the bottoms where old cedar stumps tower over you.LOL, you described one of our later picking areas PERFECTLY. We always comment about seeing the buckboard notches.
I'm guessing the trees had alot of dead wood in them? Or your garden had the mycelium in it and they liked the cottonwood makeup and decided to use it to fruit. The mycelium from morels nearby in the woods or somewhere hidden could have found their way into the decaying wood through the organic matter on the ground I mentioned and then when you chipped them up it released them and created the mushroom bloom. The mycelium can travel through organic matter a long ways. Mushrooms are amazing!