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I believe that is an Amanita Muscaria or "Death Cap".
Actually, my understating was that the vikings drank the urine of those they forced to ingest the mushrooms. The hallucinogenic would pass through the body of that person into their urine, leaving the nasty poisons behind.
Poisonous, but often pictured in story books for kids. Rather unmistakable.
that my friend is a Fly Agaric poisenous
I can't believe that one site I read said that some people have eaten this poisonous mushroom with no ill effects by parboiling and throwing out the water. Sounds like Russian roulette.
Interesting Jeff, had not heard that variation to the story. Max
I can't believe that one site I read said that some people have eaten this poisonous mushroom with no ill effects by parboiling and throwing out the water. Sounds like Russian roulette. Isn't that how pokesalad (aka Pokeweed, Phytolacca americana) is eaten without the ill effects too?
Although kings had people to taste their food for poison effects, it came in handy to find a use for discovered edible plants to.
I remember something from my Mycology class in college. The professor said that many wild mushrooms that we eat have toxins that are harmful to humans, they just aren't absorbed into the blood stream. That is of course unless you drink alcohol during the meal, then you could get in trouble.
Well - I bet you all are thinking - "I wouldn't ever eat something like that!" HAH Look up cashews (which grow here) - more than a few tourist have discovered that you don't want to eat the nut until it has been processed! Caustic like you wouldn't believeYou all like cashews don't you? Usually in the tropics they don't eat the nut - they eat the fruit.
I suspect it is also based on "when you get hungry enough, you will try anything..." Let's see - starvation on the one hand, trying a new food on the other. One way or another, your pain will soon be over... See Swampy - you ole poison eater you!
An introduced species which is associated with Pines. By crushing the cap in milk, or sprinkling it with sugar one can make a poisoned bait for killing flies.