We love you and the fungi. We in the myco community really appreciate your effort to describe interesting findings of the fungi world. Awesome and thank you.
@@Sailormoonpi ; And I am talking about White settlers, Indian oral history goes back even further. Funny how tree beating, strong odors, sagittal crests predate the discovery of Gorillas.
Thank you. I wish all my teachers from elementary school on up through college and beyond were as succinct and detailed and wonderfully and never boringly repetitive in the descriptions and linking of concepts. So glad I found this channel.
Can't thank you enough, Adam! Your content is the absolute best! I'm anxiously awaiting spring, when I hope to harvest some Pheasantback, and Shitake that I started last year! I've learned a LOT from you!!!
Adam my man. You are a fungi haha and a mushroom guru. Ive been studying mycology for several years now and I'm one of your biggest fans. Ive learned so much from you over the years and am very happy youre still at it and still sharing your wealth of knowledge. You are one sharp dude! Cant help but think the mushrooms had something to do with that? Keep um coming. If I'm ever out your way I'd love to go on a field trip with you pick your brain and share ideas. Much love and respect brother from another. Thank you!
We need a group: followers of Adam. Lol. There’s probably so many of us that feel just like you do. If we all got together, we’d throw the ragingest effing party.
"And Sasquatches!" ; just to see if you are paying attention! There is meaning to most things, most people say and Adam's insertion is likely no exception. This is our first winter season of the last four without our resident Sasquatch. We don't miss their sudden departure, in fact we are enjoying our ability to once again enjoy the outdoors that includes our own back yard, without having to constantly look over our shoulders;what a nuisance. Our dog which now suffers from nervous anxiety is especially thankful. although I don't believe he will never be the same; just sayin'!.
Adam you would make the best teacher! Your so well spoken all the time and reiterate important topics so we can remember all of it and explain them very well, your grasp of knowledge is so diverse and thorough.Thank you for every single video you put out and all the effort that goes into them. It is very highly appreciated.
Adam thank you for all the information you have supplied to me though your videos. They have been very helpful ! I have gotten very much into hunting mushrooms year round always before I only hunted in the spring. You have helped to broadened my thoughts about mushrooms. I'm currently using turkey tail mushrooms as a medicinal tea. I have also made a tincture which I am going to start using later. Any special instructions on using this or other mushrooms would be very much appreciated! And thanks again and looking forward to Future posts!
I like the plain brown ones that make me see colors when I eat um.I know I'm a dumb ass but I couldn't resist.I really like these videos Adam you are one smart dude and a great teacher.
Love your videos! I have noticed oyster mushrooms (p.ostreatus) in my area tend to fruit cream white in the spring, summer and fall but those same mushrooms during a winter flush will often be tan to olive brown. Never had occurred to me that they may just be trying to stay warm! Thanks!
Interesting! I notice there are a lot more colorful mushrooms in the Southeastern United States compared to the Northeastern U.S. The density of melanin rich mycelium like chaga is far greater in the Adirondacks than the Blue Ridge mountains. Thanks for sharing these findings!
10:06 was very helpful, please consider doing more videos on basic fungal taxonomy with phylogenetic tree visuals included. I've struggled to absorb this from books but you really have a knack for teaching and making this type of obscure information accessible.
This was such a beautiful and well put together video. I really appreciate what you’re doing with this channel. You’re concise in your explanations and I always come away feeling like I’ve learned something new.
So happy I found your channel yesterday, I've been binge watching them ever since lol. I've always picked chanterelles but I've only been trying different wild mushrooms for the last couple of years. The hunt for them is my favorite part and it's so exciting to find a new area to pick from. I'm suprized at how many different kinds are edible here in Nova Scotia.
I wish my biology teacher has this much passion about teaching when I was in HS lol; these videos are so rewatchable because you can never soak it all up. Stellar
"selected from a limited set of fungi that are actually somewhat related" so, this doesn't apply to most fungi, ergo, it's only a climactic response by a very few mushrooms, but yeah, cooler climate mushrooms may have improved/accelerated metabolism when experiencing slightly increased temperature due to increased solar warming, due to increased pigmentation.. Lots of studies to go then, but a good place to start! Interesting- nicely done! You're a fun-gi!
Your channel came onto my feed right after my boyfriend and I broke up so you guys have become my depression movie. I also am going into Botany because of you guys. Thanks
Adam - great job.everything had been said about your work in all comments...people appreciate you I do too. I am from Czech republic - mushroom enthusiast since childhood, now living in states and your videos are immensely helpful. Thank you
So cool! I had my first sighting of a bolete mushroom in front of my old elementary school, and sure enough there was a dozen of them growing under a pine tree (maybe eastern white pine). Amazing that they are helping each other thrive.
Now that was an awesome video Adam! I always wondered about why different Mushrooms exhibited different colorations. As with all of Nature, mushroom coloration is extremely complex. This reminds me of a similar topic related to coloration of Corals & Reef fish. Amazing stuff! BTW, you deserve way more subscribers.................. 👍👍
I love your videos so much. I've felt really stuck inside with no motivation for much of anything and these videos are making me want to adventure and learn more about nature. it is so truly wonderful what you are doing and the knowledge you are teaching. these are the kinds of videos I wish they would have shown us in school!
I gather Adam you where studious in high school for keeping up with al the scientific terms and Latin names, you are the most interesting to watch because of your extensive knowledge 👍👍👍
I follow you from North italy close to the Alps. Even if our mushroom biodiversity is obviously different, your channel is of great usefulness. Thank you!
Very awesome to see people reviewing peer reviewed research in content not for an academic audience. Thanks! Hope to get to say hi at WPA Mushroom club meetup one day!
He just said Sasquatch. I know they exist in contact with many Natives across the world, but do we know they produce heat endothermically from research, or assuming so, because they are mammals?
LOL! 😄 I don't tolerate the cold well at all, and live in western Wisconsin. You *have* to have beautiful cold winter mornings and days, or you'd go nuts living in the north! 😄😎 ❄️❄️❄️❄️❄️
Shaman in Siberia fed the "fly Agaric" to their reindeer to keep them calm & gave them energy and stamina. Easy. to see how flying reindeer and Santa's red & white suit became a folk. legend that spread the world over. Nice video as always Adam...Haven't walked Cook's Forest or Nelson's Ledges since my father took us as kids....
hey dude, make a video on psyllocibin mushrooms pls (they may be illegal in some states but they are super duper medicinal, they could save the world tbh)
Amazing Adam thank you, I'm going to have to watch this one a few times, the Turkey tail threw me until you said they were exceptions, every days a school day my friend.
I have heard that Matsutaki mushrooms in Georgia are darker brown on top of the cap. I have not found any yet, but I am on the quest. I have also found that some Honey mushrooms in Georgia can be a dark brown color. But we also have some honey colored mushrooms.
New to the channel. I'm going to guess that you are a teacher, have been a teacher, or have done programs in higher education for teaching. You do a great job of packing a lot of information in an easily digestible way, without appearing patronizing or impatient.
Cool video. Fascinating topic. Seeing as the mushroom is basically just the reproductive part of the mycelium, the light/dark hot/cold relationship probably doesn't do much to the organism as a whole, seeing as it is basically stuck in a giant heatsink. All chemistry is heat-sensetive, so maybe it can produce more/less spores depending on hitting the 'right' temperature.
Dear Adam Weather and color of can be actually proven with Amber Jelly Mushrooms. Now with weather being in winter season more people have posted in the internet darker mushrooms including black trumpet and in this side of town I keep finding more turkey tale, brick cap and jelly mushrooms
The protection those pigments might offer the mushroom might also be protection that transfers to the eaters of those mushrooms. Very cool, thank you for sharing your passion.
Colors have much to do with healing at times such as the pigment in Cayane pepper. I found and took pictures of a pod full of fruit. The pod was basically black but the fruit inside was orange. The fruit were in clumps of four and looked like miniature orange bell peppers. The texture was also that of peppers. The taste was mild with a touch of sweetness. Can someone tell me what they are?
I believe that every area has its own unique version of the same fungi, and probably its own unique set of fungi species. I see Adam finding Reshi on Conifer trees, but I find it on pecan trees and some other nut trees in Georgia. It looks the same.
We love you and the fungi. We in the myco community really appreciate your effort to describe interesting findings of the fungi world. Awesome and thank you.
Did you just say sazquach?
*"and Sasquatches"*
Actually, I think the plural of Sasquatch is Sasqutachi. Just like fungi.
Interesting fact: Sasquatches are one of the few egg-laying mammals, like the platypus.
@@CSAN33 ; Not a fact. Here is an actual fact: Sasquatch sightings predate the discovery of Gorillas.
@@FirstDagger omg I hope not
@@Sailormoonpi ; And I am talking about White settlers, Indian oral history goes back even further. Funny how tree beating, strong odors, sagittal crests predate the discovery of Gorillas.
You always have the most interesting and unique plant and fungus related knowledge to share, Adam. I appreciate you and your efforts enlightening us.
The more you speak, the more we learn! Thank you so much, Adam! Happy 2020!
This video was visually beautiful and did an excellent job of clearly presenting some complex and fascinating facts. Great work!
Funny timing, I just found my first Indigo Milky a coup please days ago. Never expected that deep of a blue after nicking the flesh. Was pretty neat.
Thank you. I wish all my teachers from elementary school on up through college and beyond were as succinct and detailed and wonderfully and never boringly repetitive in the descriptions and linking of concepts. So glad I found this channel.
Really interesting, thanks.
Love the way you explain things. Your enthusiasm is infectious.
Thanks for watching!
Your music choice is giving me a twin peaks vibe.
Elizabeth Start Hot black coffee and cherry pie!
As always, thank you for sharing your knowledge. Well informed and well taken. Thanks again Adam.
Can't thank you enough, Adam! Your content is the absolute best! I'm anxiously awaiting spring, when I hope to harvest some Pheasantback, and Shitake that I started last year! I've learned a LOT from you!!!
Adam my man. You are a fungi haha and a mushroom guru. Ive been studying mycology for several years now and I'm one of your biggest fans. Ive learned so much from you over the years and am very happy youre still at it and still sharing your wealth of knowledge. You are one sharp dude! Cant help but think the mushrooms had something to do with that? Keep um coming. If I'm ever out your way I'd love to go on a field trip with you pick your brain and share ideas. Much love and respect brother from another. Thank you!
We need a group: followers of Adam. Lol. There’s probably so many of us that feel just like you do. If we all got together, we’d throw the ragingest effing party.
Have you come across any Sasquatch while mushroom hunting?
Follow the Squatch to the mushroom! Great video.
I've noticed this too, the ones that bruise blue talk to me. ;)
carpo719
🍄 👍🏻😃
"And Sasquatches!" ; just to see if you are paying attention! There is meaning to most things, most people say and Adam's insertion is likely no exception. This is our first winter season of the last four without our resident Sasquatch. We don't miss their sudden departure, in fact we are enjoying our ability to once again enjoy the outdoors that includes our own back yard, without having to constantly look over our shoulders;what a nuisance. Our dog which now suffers from nervous anxiety is especially thankful. although I don't believe he will never be the same; just sayin'!.
Jillian 😳
Adam you would make the best teacher! Your so well spoken all the time and reiterate important topics so we can remember all of it and explain them very well, your grasp of knowledge is so diverse and thorough.Thank you for every single video you put out and all the effort that goes into them. It is very highly appreciated.
Thank you!
As always Adam, thank you for the quality information and entertaining content. You are a saint.
Adam thank you for all the information you have supplied to me though your videos. They have been very helpful ! I have gotten very much into hunting mushrooms year round always before I only hunted in the spring. You have helped to broadened my thoughts about mushrooms. I'm currently using turkey tail mushrooms as a medicinal tea. I have also made a tincture which I am going to start using later. Any special instructions on using this or other mushrooms would be very much appreciated! And thanks again and looking forward to Future posts!
Thank you for providing another great and scientifically based mycology video!
You're welcome!
Thanks for sharing
I learned so much
I appreciate your efforts and presentation
I like the plain brown ones that make me see colors when I eat um.I know I'm a dumb ass but I couldn't resist.I really like these videos Adam you are one smart dude and a great teacher.
LOL 😜 And yes, Adam is an *awesome* teacher! 😃
Thank you. Very much appreciate your time, passion and patience. May the Fungi be with you!
Glad you mentioned sasquach in your list
Much love fungi brother
Love your videos! I have noticed oyster mushrooms (p.ostreatus) in my area tend to fruit cream white in the spring, summer and fall but those same mushrooms during a winter flush will often be tan to olive brown. Never had occurred to me that they may just be trying to stay warm! Thanks!
Shout out to the first video of the new year being 20 min 20 seconds long. :D
You noticed. ;)
Interesting! I notice there are a lot more colorful mushrooms in the Southeastern United States compared to the Northeastern U.S. The density of melanin rich mycelium like chaga is far greater in the Adirondacks than the Blue Ridge mountains. Thanks for sharing these findings!
10:06 was very helpful, please consider doing more videos on basic fungal taxonomy with phylogenetic tree visuals included. I've struggled to absorb this from books but you really have a knack for teaching and making this type of obscure information accessible.
Glad you enjoyed that part. I will keep your suggestion in mind for future videos.
Thank you once again for helping me connect to my land! I appreciate your focus on the cutting edge research - not a lot of channels do this!
Glad you enjoyed it!
love your work !! learned so much! thank you
This was such a beautiful and well put together video. I really appreciate what you’re doing with this channel. You’re concise in your explanations and I always come away feeling like I’ve learned something new.
Thank you for the interesting info and for presenting it clearly and simply.
I like the inclusion of Sasquatch!
It’s for diversity!
After ~15 years of using youtube, I have finally subscribed to a channel. Well-informed, great to-the point videos.
Always energetic, empassioned, educational, & entertaining! I
another great video..... thanks Adam!
Love your channel man. Keep up the great work!
Thanks!
So happy I found your channel yesterday, I've been binge watching them ever since lol. I've always picked chanterelles but I've only been trying different wild mushrooms for the last couple of years. The hunt for them is my favorite part and it's so exciting to find a new area to pick from. I'm suprized at how many different kinds are edible here in Nova Scotia.
Amazing shots! Perfectly presented info! Outstanding job Adam!!
Always like photographing Violet Coral (clavaria zollingeri). Using natural light and the right camera settings, really bring out the color hues.
So incredibly interesting. Love all your videos
I wish my biology teacher has this much passion about teaching when I was in HS lol; these videos are so rewatchable because you can never soak it all up. Stellar
"selected from a limited set of fungi that are actually somewhat related" so, this doesn't apply to most fungi, ergo, it's only a climactic response by a very few mushrooms, but yeah, cooler climate mushrooms may have improved/accelerated metabolism when experiencing slightly increased temperature due to increased solar warming, due to increased pigmentation.. Lots of studies to go then, but a good place to start!
Interesting- nicely done! You're a fun-gi!
You just blew my mind! I just fell in love with these endomyco guys!! I wonder what are the original fungi associated with olive trees and nut trees?
This was an awesome presentation of some pretty complicated stuff! Thanks for walking us through it -- I enjoyed every minute of it!
You're welcome, thanks for watching!
love the frog!! you sure manage to get beautiful shots and are a great teacher!!
Sasquatches like mushrooms!☺
Great explanation of the research, with all its caveats and nuances. Fascinating topic!
Thanks for watching!
I got the email. Thanks for providing us all with 100% free educational content. Your channel is very helpful man.
Amazing amount of information and so well presented.
👍👍👍👍👍
Thanks Phil!
Great video! Thx
I really enjoyed this topic. Been wondering this same thing myself. The variety of mushrooms colors and structures is overlooked.
I almost overlooked this guy. I'm glad I clicked on video though. Now I'm hooked.
I appreciate how organized your videos are
Should be a good day for fall oysters here in SWPA
Thank You Man!!! I'm gunna have to watch this one a couple times...lol Love It Brother!!! Keep sharing the Love ;)
Yes! I was looking forward to a colors in nature video 😩😭 thank you Adam
Your channel came onto my feed right after my boyfriend and I broke up so you guys have become my depression movie. I also am going into Botany because of you guys. Thanks
Adam - great job.everything had been said about your work in all comments...people appreciate you I do too. I am from Czech republic - mushroom enthusiast since childhood, now living in states and your videos are immensely helpful. Thank you
You're welcome, and thanks for watching!
Silvia, are you in an area affected by drought? Has it decreased mushroom finds? 🍄🌍💦☀️
Gee - it's like being back at school and i love it. Amazing vids Adam. Thank you.
Excellent research and sharing as always. Thank You!
Thanks for watching!
Hey, I'm new here. Thanks for the info. Excellent presentation!💖😎
So cool! I had my first sighting of a bolete mushroom in front of my old elementary school, and sure enough there was a dozen of them growing under a pine tree (maybe eastern white pine). Amazing that they are helping each other thrive.
Thanks for the brilliant and colorful ideas Sir
I love your videos, I won't remember the terms but you make it easy to understand the concepts.
Now that was an awesome video Adam! I always wondered about why different Mushrooms exhibited different colorations. As with all of Nature, mushroom coloration is extremely complex. This reminds me of a similar topic related to coloration of Corals & Reef fish. Amazing stuff! BTW, you deserve way more subscribers.................. 👍👍
Amazing video! Thanks so much for your hard work Adam!
I’m learning so much about my fungal sisters and brothers. Thanks
Did you say "Sasquatches"? This would make for an interesting subject.....
I love your videos so much. I've felt really stuck inside with no motivation for much of anything and these videos are making me want to adventure and learn more about nature. it is so truly wonderful what you are doing and the knowledge you are teaching. these are the kinds of videos I wish they would have shown us in school!
Thanks for your awesome videos. Glad to see more smart ppl talk about sasquatch!
I am in PNW relatively new to the fungi world I love and appreciate your videos. Thanks Adam.
Thanks for watching!
I gather Adam you where studious in high school for keeping up with al the scientific terms and Latin names, you are the most interesting to watch because of your extensive knowledge 👍👍👍
I follow you from North italy close to the Alps. Even if our mushroom biodiversity is obviously different, your channel is of great usefulness. Thank you!
Very awesome to see people reviewing peer reviewed research in content not for an academic audience. Thanks! Hope to get to say hi at WPA Mushroom club meetup one day!
He just said Sasquatch. I know they exist in contact with many Natives across the world, but do we know they produce heat endothermically from research, or assuming so, because they are mammals?
"Beautiful cold winter morning..." is not possible. I hated cold weather so much I intentionally moved south nearly 50 years ago.
Well well well... It's been a while. Remember Mozartghost1791? What happened to the forum? It was one of the best foraging forums I've been on.
LOL! 😄 I don't tolerate the cold well at all, and live in western Wisconsin. You *have* to have beautiful cold winter mornings and days, or you'd go nuts living in the north! 😄😎 ❄️❄️❄️❄️❄️
Shaman in Siberia fed the "fly Agaric" to their reindeer to keep them calm & gave them energy and stamina. Easy. to see how flying reindeer and Santa's red & white suit became a folk. legend that spread the world over. Nice video as always Adam...Haven't walked Cook's Forest or Nelson's Ledges since my father took us as kids....
I'll bet Sasquatch, eats mushrooms.
I straight up want to give this dude a hug.
great work, professor
Thank you for being an amazing teacher. Your details are appreciated!
hey dude, make a video on psyllocibin mushrooms pls (they may be illegal in some states but they are super duper medicinal, they could save the world tbh)
Amazing Adam thank you, I'm going to have to watch this one a few times, the Turkey tail threw me until you said they were exceptions, every days a school day my friend.
I ate a mushroom and saw colours
@chu Harry it was one of those magic ones
I ate a mushroom and FELT color...true story.
@@leos8019 :D
not only did i watch to the end but watched it 3 times lols
Awesome topic.
I have heard that Matsutaki mushrooms in Georgia are darker brown on top of the cap. I have not found any yet, but I am on the quest. I have also found that some Honey mushrooms in Georgia can be a dark brown color. But we also have some honey colored mushrooms.
New to the channel. I'm going to guess that you are a teacher, have been a teacher, or have done programs in higher education for teaching. You do a great job of packing a lot of information in an easily digestible way, without appearing patronizing or impatient.
I super want to be your real life friend!! Lol I don’t have enough friends with an interest for nature like you! I learn so much from you!
Cool video. Fascinating topic.
Seeing as the mushroom is basically just the reproductive part of the mycelium, the light/dark hot/cold relationship probably doesn't do much to the organism as a whole, seeing as it is basically stuck in a giant heatsink.
All chemistry is heat-sensetive, so maybe it can produce more/less spores depending on hitting the 'right' temperature.
i think you should be up there with the greats like paul stamet. your passion is remarkable. good job man your a blast to listen to.
Great info TY.
Lots of good information! A good video to go back to for review of terms, etc. Thank you!
Dear Adam
Weather and color of can be actually proven with Amber Jelly Mushrooms. Now with weather being in winter season more people have posted in the internet darker mushrooms including black trumpet and in this side of town I keep finding more turkey tale, brick cap and jelly mushrooms
The protection those pigments might offer the mushroom might also be protection that transfers to the eaters of those mushrooms. Very cool, thank you for sharing your passion.
Thank you for the information
Thank you for yet another great and informative presentation!
Hahahahaha.. sasquatches. That was perfect and you didnt even hesitate.
Colors have much to do with healing at times such as the pigment in Cayane pepper.
I found and took pictures of a pod full of fruit. The pod was basically black but the fruit inside was orange. The fruit were in clumps of four and looked like miniature orange bell peppers. The texture was also that of peppers.
The taste was mild with a touch of sweetness. Can someone tell me what they are?
I believe that every area has its own unique version of the same fungi, and probably its own unique set of fungi species. I see Adam finding Reshi on Conifer trees, but I find it on pecan trees and some other nut trees in Georgia. It looks the same.