Over the weekend, I saw one come in with landing lights on and you could hear it skid when it hit my forearm. You could hear it crunch when I smacked it.Mosquitoes big enough to kill a mule too.
You can buy the spores etc online, and I have a book that talks about the perfect conditions for them (including having some charred wood in the mix). It might be worth it to start some outHi guys, just an FYI, wild morels that you are all picking up these days in the backwoods, they are currently going for $70. For a 3 # box in order for me to do my thing with them, just too expensive at this given point and time. But anyways, enjoy it if you have them, it's definitely a delicacy. I would definitely recommend using cream with them..... Enjoy!
$40/lb.
(broken link removed to http://milwaukee.craigslist.org/grd/3818653632.html)
Be careful out there ya'llSpawn for black morels:
http://www.fungi.com/product-detail/product/black-morel-grain-master-bag.html
Wooden plugs for inoculating stumps/logs
(broken link removed to http://www.fungi.com/shop/grow-mushrooms-on-logs-and-stumps.html)
(broken image removed)
I've done plenty of outside work around the midwest, especially northern Illinois, have been in the Louisiana swamps, jungles of Central America (including Panama's Darien region), Andean cloud forest & a couple parts of the Amazon rainforest. By FAR the worst Mosquitos I've experienced is in early summer in the woods & bogs of northern Ontario. Never mind the size, it's the numbers that really matter. Up there the season is compressed & they all come out at once. The air hums & throbs with them.Worst skeeters I ever saw were in IL. We do have several children carried off by them here every year, but the ones in IL were redonkulous.
I've heard about places with those compressed bug seasons- in parts of AK the caribou supposedly lose a pint of blood a day. InsaneMy neighbor had several nice sized gray ones growing in his back yard. He had just bought some morels & thought they looked similar. Texted me a photo & I said Bon Appetite! They were afraid they might be look-alikes so they tossed them
I've done plenty of outside work around the midwest, especially northern Illinois, have been in the Louisiana swamps, jungles of Central America (including Panama's Darien region), Andean cloud forest & a couple parts of the Amazon rainforest. By FAR the worst Mosquitos I've experienced is in early summer in the woods & bogs of northern Ontario. Never mind the size, it's the numbers that really matter. Up there the season is compressed & they all come out at once. The air hums & throbs with them.
Way worse than the Mosquitos though are the Black Flies in late spring/early summer. You can't hardly breathe for Black Flies. They're up your nose, in your eyes & ears, blood running out of your open wounds! Even the Moose are driven insane.
One time I ran out of bug dope for just about an hour in the woods. I got so many Black Fly bites that I was sick the next day from the thousands of tiny doses of toxins. Couldn't even eat my breakfast. I hear & believe that the muskeg/tundra further north is even worse.
The deerflies are what I hate worst. I may try the blue cup and tanglefoot method. I saw folks use buckets for this and collect hundreds of deerfliesJags, that sounds like a good idea. Wonder if it will work as well with them damm deer flies and horseflies? Those bastages are a pain in the azz come June/July........
Jags, that sounds like a good idea. Wonder if it will work as well with them damm deer flies and horseflies? Those bastages are a pain in the azz come June/July........
I may try the blue cup and tanglefoot method.
I think I'll be getting a bottle and maybe I'll do some experimenting. Thanks for the link bro!
I think it thins the tanglefoot for application. Outdoors folks swear by this, it doesn't seem to be one of those BS "Burn a potato/tin can/Taylor Swift CD to prevent creosote" type cures.I can't figure out what the paint thinner is used for??
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.