• @Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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    551 month ago

    nah it’s generally fairly easy to ID mushrooms, the problem is just that if you miss a feature and mistake it for another, you’ll fucking liquidize from the inside out.

    This is the same reason that you never touch something that looks like a carrot plant in the wild, because it could be that one plant that kills you 3 times over.

    I agree that it’s generally not worth the risk though, hence why those who pick mushrooms (which is pretty standard to do here in the nordics) stick to like 5 species who have no dangerous lookalikes and actually taste good and are easy to find.

    Here in sweden 90% of what people pick is chanterelles or boletes, whose entire families look effectively the same and at worst simply don’t taste good. Boletes have ONE slightly toxic species in sweden, and it’s bright red and only grows on one island in the baltic sea.

    • @teejay@lemmy.world
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      251 month ago

      This is the same reason that you never touch something that looks like a carrot plant in the wild

      That’s funny. I was just thinking to myself “Fuck all this mushroom noise. I’ll just stick to eating carrots, no way to mistake those for something else.” I guess I’ll die quickly in the coming apocalypse.

      • @Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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        141 month ago

        This is why we befriend the people who can reliably ID plants and know what is safe to eat, you wouldn’t survive an apocalypse alone regardless.

        • @Mirshe@lemmy.world
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          21 month ago

          Mhm, society persists even through collapse scenarios mostly for exactly this reason. John the Butcher in 13th century Scotland might have lost his entire village to The Plague, but those guys in the village 3 miles down the road still have people who know how to forage, or hunt, or grow food, etc etc etc.

      • ExtraPartsLeft
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        11 month ago

        Spotted water hemlock

        “The confusion with parsnips can be fatal as C. maculata is extremely poisonous. It is considered to be North America’s most toxic native plant.”

        “The chief poison is cicutoxin, an unsaturated aliphatic alcohol that is most concentrated in the roots. Upon human consumption, nausea, vomiting, and tremors occur within 30–60 minutes, followed by severe cramps, projectile vomiting, and convulsions.”

        It supposedly tastes good though.

    • @fossilesque@mander.xyzOPM
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      191 month ago

      If anyone is curious about the carrot mention, Google where the phrase “Sardonic Grin” came from.

    • @MonkeMischief
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      1 month ago

      never touch something that looks like a carrot plant in the wild, because it could be that one plant that kills you 3 times over.

      Okay so when you said “Never touch” I was thinking casually “Oh, don’t go messing with it or munching on it or whatever. Sound advice.”

      Looking it up, oh…poison hemlock…you were being dead-exact.

      Source

      “As his doctor, Christopher Hayner, MD, pointed out, LeBlond didn’t have to eat the poisonous plant to fall ill. “Anything you can touch, you can also inhale,” he explained to Good Housekeeping. When LeBlond used a chainsaw to cut down the hemlock, tiny particles scattered in the air, and when he breathed them in, they almost killed him.”

      Oh holy crap. Kill it with fire!

      “If you do find a suspicious stalk and want to remove it, wear gloves, a face mask, and protective clothing. Dig it out from the roots, rather than cutting it, and never burn it, as the fumes can cause a reaction.

      Not even fire can sate its lust for indiscriminate killing?!

      Apparently it’s a “recent problem” that this stuff is spreading all over the place.

      It was as I suspected. Going outside is overrated. 😬