Archive for December, 2009

How to Catch 100% More Morel Mushrooms Using a New Scientific Discovery

If you’re interested in learning how to find more morel mushrooms, then this article may help you find more mushrooms then ever before.

Many of us know that spotting morel mushrooms is a tricky task. However, many of us would still like to find MORE of these scrumptious little guys wouldn’t we?

This article will help you!

Have you ever noticed that Morels always seem to “jump out” at you suddenly, but you never see them out of the corner of your eye?

There is a scientific reason for this, and it’s based on a new cutting-edge discovery in the psycho-cognitive field.

You have something in your brain called the Fovea. (pho-VEE-uh) It is the wide-screen area field of your vision.

The best way to describe the Fovea is by using a picture called a Venn Diagram seen below. The Venn Diagram below illustrates your Foveal field of human vision.

One circle is your left eye’s vision, and the other is your right eye’s vision. They overlap to make what’s called your “Foveal View.”

This is only 2 degrees of your sight where you interpret the highest resolution detail and color. Up to about 5 degrees of the Foveal View you can detect almost full detail and color.

Completely outside of the Foveal View (but still in your line of sight) is called your “periphery.” This sight is low resolution, tuned to motion and contrast only, not color or detail.

Foveal Vision and Locating Morels

Now that we understand how our vision translates information into our brain, we can better understand why finding morel mushrooms is so difficult.

We cannot see the mushrooms out of the corner of our eyes (because of our periphery) and therefore, we can only see them in our Foveal View. (Again, this is our highest reception of color and detail and is only about 2 to 5 degrees of your total vision.)

A very small range…

The only way to find more mushrooms, then, is to SLOW DOWN when we are looking because we need to see them in our Foveal View.

Admittedly, this is very hard to do due to the fact that this only makes of 2-5 degrees of our total sight!

So in this “fast paced” world we live in, how can we learn to slow down and see more mushrooms that can only be seen in our Foveal View?

Practice!

More specifically, practice standing still LONGER to allow for your sight to see more detail in your Foveal View. More mushrooms will “jump out” at you.

The best mushroom hunters (the ones who find the most mushrooms) only find more mushrooms that you because they stand still longer.

An expert rule of thumb for morel hunting is for every one minute you walk, you should stand and look for the mushroom for SIX.

A 6 to 1 ratio.

This is very hard to do, but if you can practice and learn that the slower you go the more mushrooms you’ll spot, you can increase your yearly bounty easily by 100%. And probably a lot more too.

That means if you find 100 mushrooms in a season, you may find as many as twice that amount by simply understanding how your sight works, its limitations, and that you must simply learn to stand still more.

One way to get better at this is to actually time yourself on two points of data.

• How long you walked on your mushroom hunt (total time)

• How long you stood still on your hunt (total time)

Subtract the time you stood from the total time you hunted. Then, divide your answer by the total number you hunted. This will tell you how long you walked. Shoot for 17% or less.

Here’s the formula:

t = total time hunted

s = total time stood still

T = total time walking

(t-s)/t = T (x 100)

Here’s an example:

You hunted for 100 minutes(t). You stood for 80 minutes(s).

Did you stand for enough time (goal 17%) to increase our mushroom bounty?

Let’s see the calculation below:

100 minutes total hunt (t) – 80 minutes standing still (s) =

20 minutes walking total

20 minutes divided by 100 (t) = .20 (T)

Multiply .20 times 100 to get the percent (.20 x 100 = 20%)

We walked 20% of total time hunted. Did you reach your goal?

No, you missed your goal of 17% by just 3%. Not bad though.

Again, your goal is a 1:6 radio. Walk one minute (17%) and stand and look for six minutes (83%).

This translates into standing and looking for about 83% of your total time in the field. And only about 17% walking.

Yes, that seems like a lot of standing because it is! However, if you can get this SINGLE task down, you’ll substantially increase your mushroom bounty. I promise!

Please respond if you found this article helpful. It is the most cutting edge information available, and it is my goal to use science to help you all find more mushrooms.

Thanks for reading. :-)

Garrett Todd

Garrett Todd is a fellow hunting enthusiast from Kalamazoo County in Michigan. He has been taught by a 10 year mushroom hunting expert and now uses cutting-edge sciences to add further value to the mushroom hunting world by publishing useful information.

Garrett also incorporates many well-known mushroom hunting strategies and even some unknown ones as well.

Published in: Post | on December 15th, 2009 | 1 Comment »

Identifying Wild Mushrooms – Learn How to Find Edible Mushrooms in the Wild

This may come as a surprise to some people, but many of the expensive, special gourmet mushrooms that you will pay a lot of money for in a top restaurant are actually available to you completely free of charge, and many of which could be growing not very far from your current location!

Wild mushrooms such as the Bolette variety, considered to be one of the most delicious mushrooms of all, will usually grow in many different kinds of forests at around summer/autumn time, depending on the weather. Mushrooms like wet, damp, moist conditions, and the Bolette variety like to grow in a close proximity to Oak and Beech trees, amongst grass. These mushrooms are very highly sort after, especially the Penny Bun variety, which tastes just as nice as it looks.

Another delicious and still somewhat mysterious type of fungi is that of a truffle – this is a small round dark (or white) fruit body which appears at the base of old beech trees, sometimes they are a few centimeters below the surface (and therefore invisible and very hard to find), yet with the right knowledge they can still be discovered. People sometimes use dogs or pigs to help sniff out a truffle, thanks to their strange yet potent smell, and it is a very lucrative business as decent, good quality truffles have been sold in the past for several thousand pounds!

Morels are another kind of tasty, edible mushroom, again highly used by top restaurants, and again not too cheap either. These are slightly different in their growing parameters compared to your typical mushroom, in the fact that they appear in Spring time, and by the fact that they prefer an urban environment. Morels have been known to appear in many strange locations, such as popping up by a concrete pavement, or in a car park, and so you are unlikely to find many of these in a forest – they may actually be much closer to you, maybe even appearing in your garden.

The reason that the 3 above kinds of fungi are all so expensive and sought after is down to one point – they currently only grow in the wild, that is to say that no-one is able to cultivate either Bolettes, Truffles or Morels (however some people are spending a lot of time researching how to grow Truffles, and so you could expect these to be available in the future). But its still amazing to think that these expensive and delicious forms of mushrooms are available to you for nothing, in the wild, and yet still you could pay incredible amounts in a restaurant to be able to taste any one of these delights.

Learn everything you need to know about growing mushrooms yourself, in your own home or garden. Keep up to date with the current mushroom season by visiting our wild mushroom blog.

Published in: Post | on December 2nd, 2009 | No Comments »
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