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any one reading this info needs to cunsult an expert befor hunting and eating of wild mushrooms.[/center]
You are a hundred miles or so north of me, so with out a picture of it I could not identify it. "ya know its a seeing to beleive thingy" Puff balls dont usualy grow during the dog days of summer. at least not around my area... If your seeing puff balls now, I would expect to be ice fishing in november....[
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I wonder if those puff ball you seen werent earth stars? [url "http://www.wildmanstevebrill.com/Mushrooms.Folder/Earthstar.html"]Earth Stars[/url] are in the puffball family but are not edible and are in the immature season about the time you spotted them. The biggest earth star I ever found is about 3 inches.
or ya know they could be truffles, Truffles resemble puffballs and grow underground, but it not uncommon for them to serface if they grow large. Truffles are normaly hunted for with trained pigs and dogs. Truffles are in season, thogh american truffles are not as prized among mushroom hunters as Euripian species because it is hard to maintain a shroom hunting piggy.... Many town frown on pet pigs....
most truffels I find are quarter sized, but I have found them grape fruit sized.
[url "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuber_%28genus%29"]
Tuber[/url] species, (the truffle), Truffles belong to the ascomycete grouping of fungi. The truffle fruitbodies develop underground in [url "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mycorrhiza"]mycorrhizal[/url] association with certain trees e.g. [url "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oak"]oak[/url], [url "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poplar"]poplar[/url], [url "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beech"]beech[/url], and [url "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hazelnut"]hazel[/url]. Being difficult to find, trained [url "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pig"]pigs[/url] or [url "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dog"]dogs[/url] are often used to sniff them out for easy harvesting. [ul] [li]
[url "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuber_aestivum"]Tuber aestivum[/url] (Summer or St. Jean truffle) [li]
[url "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuber_brumale"]Tuber brumale[/url] [li]
[url "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuber_magnatum"]Tuber magnatum[/url] (Piemont white truffle) [li]
[url "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuber_melanosporum"]Tuber melanosporum[/url] (Perigord truffle)[/li][/ul]
Truffles dont need water to grow and do well in drouts where as Puffers needs lots of water and a cold snap.
I went out yesterday looking for puff balls in my favorite placeses. "Nothin, nither old or new" Its still a bit early for them here still. they dont ususaly show up for another week or two. after a cold snap and lots of rain to start them growing, Much like morells it takes a cold rain to get the spores to germinate.
I have found puffers the size of bushell baskets.
Puffers require that you blanch them or saute' them prior to freezing, otherwise the go bad amost emediatly. They can be slieced or cubed then dried if you have the dryers to do it with. They can be canned but I dont know any one who has a recipy.
I did see the ferry shrooms, "toxic to humans but not squrils" "the ones that look like white umbrellas.
============================== [center]Puff balls[/center] [center][url "http://www.wildmanstevebrill.com/Mushrooms.Folder/Puffball.html"]Puffball Homepage[/url] [/center] [center][url "http://www.wildmanstevebrill.com/Mushrooms.Folder/Puffball%20Overview.html"][size 4]Puffball Overview
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(Read this first!)[/size][/red][/center] [center]
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[/center] [center][url "http://www.indianrivermi.com/shroom.html"]
[/url] [/center] [center][black][size 3]September 2000[/size][/black][/center] [left]
[black][size 3]Looking more like a puff boulder ...[/size][/black]
[black][size 3]Lindsay LaChance found this huge puffball in the Wildwood Road area south of Indian River. The puffball weighed 18 lbs. 4 ounces, and measured 48-inches around. LaChance said she planned to make dinner out of the huge fungus.[/size][/black] [/left] [center]
[/center][/url] [center][/center] [center]============================[/center] [center]Truffles[/center] [center]Pictures of Truffles from [url "http://www.natruffling.org/"]Nats web site[/url]. (North American Truffle Society[/center] [center][url "http://www.natruffling.org/elgr.htm"]
[/url][/center] [center][url "http://www.natruffling.org/elmu.htm"][/url][/center] [center][url "http://www.natruffling.org/hyva2.htm"][/url][/center] [center][url "http://www.natruffling.org/tugi3.htm"][/url][/center] [center][url "http://www.natruffling.org/cafu.htm"][/url][/center] [center][url "http://www.natruffling.org/lesp.htm"][/url][/center] [center][url "http://www.natruffling.org/malu.htm"]
[/url][/center] [center]There are lots more pictures of other species of truffles on their website link above.[/center] [center][/center] [center]
Frequently Asked Truffle Questions [/center]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#what"]What are truffles?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#mycoph"]What is mycophagy?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#mycorr"]What is mycorrhizae?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#role"]What is the role of truffles in ecosystems?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#true"]What are "True" vs. "False" truffles?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#asco"]What are Ascomycetes and Basidiomycetes?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#poison"]Are any truffles poisonous?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#where"]Where are truffles found?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#how"]How are truffles found?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#pigs"]Pigs vs. dogs?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#maturity"]Truffle maturity and the market[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#dogs"]Truffle dog training?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#prov"]Which truffles are the gourmet edibles?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#pecan"]What are pecan truffles?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#cook"]How are truffles cooked?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#buy"]Where can I buy truffles?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#storage"]How do I store truffles?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#id"]I found a truffle. What is it?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#dry"]How do I dry truffles?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#farm"]What about truffle farming?[/url]
[url "http://www.natruffling.org/faq.htm#local"]How do I find my local mycological club?[/url]
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