Search Results for: Cinnamon
rare in the upper midwest. cap: - cm; convex or bell-shaped at first, becoming broadly bell-shaped, convex, or nearly flat; dry; silky to finely hairy; bright brick red to brownish red, often fading markedly to pale reddish brown. gills: attached to the stem; close; colored like the cap, becoming cinnamon
rare in the upper midwest. cap: - cm; convex or bell-shaped at first, becoming broadly bell-shaped, convex, or nearly flat; dry; silky to finely hairy; bright brick red to brownish red, often fading markedly to pale reddish brown. gills: attached to the stem; close; colored like the cap, becoming cinnamon...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/cortinarius_marylandensis.html
depression, or shallowly vase-shaped; drab lilac brown, fading to dirty buff; without zones; bald or minutely pocked and rugged; slimy when fresh. gills: broadly attached to the stem; close or nearly distant; creamy whitish when young, but soon becoming dirty yellowish and, eventually, pale dingy cinnamon
depression, or shallowly vase-shaped; drab lilac brown, fading to dirty buff; without zones; bald or minutely pocked and rugged; slimy when fresh. gills: broadly attached to the stem; close or nearly distant; creamy whitish when young, but soon becoming dirty yellowish and, eventually, pale dingy cinnamon...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/lactarius_argillaceifolius_megacarpus.html
becoming flat; fragile; purple, grayish, or lilac gray; the center usually darker than the edge; slimy; smooth; strongly lined, often nearly all the way to the center. gills: free from the stem or very narrowly attached to it; close or nearly crowded; whitish, becoming faintly pinkish, then rusty cinnamon
becoming flat; fragile; purple, grayish, or lilac gray; the center usually darker than the edge; slimy; smooth; strongly lined, often nearly all the way to the center. gills: free from the stem or very narrowly attached to it; close or nearly crowded; whitish, becoming faintly pinkish, then rusty cinnamon...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/bolbitius_reticulatus.html