Ich liebe das Aussehen dieser Fliegenpilze in meinem Rasen. Ich habe das Gefühl, ich lebe in einer Art Märchenland oder so. Letztes Jahr hatten wir eines, noch nie so viele wie dieses! Sind sie ein Zeichen für ein gutes Ökosystem oder etwas, das ich beseitigen sollte? (Ich hoffe wirklich, dass sie gut sind, da ich sie nicht loswerden möchte).

Ich weiß, dass sie giftig sind, aber die Katzen scheinen sich trotzdem nicht darum zu kümmern.

Von: Broken_Woman20

Share.

45 Comments

  1. Thestolenone on

    So cool, they like to grow under birch trees. I don’t think you need to get rid unless you have very young children.

  2. Suspicious_Juice9511 on

    If there is a circle of them dont do any deals with anyone there. Otherwise enjoy.

  3. CalligrapherLeft6038 on

    This year is a bumper year for them due to the weather patterns we’ve had during summer and autumn.

  4. palebluedot365 on

    Look like Fly Agaric. One of the good guys (insert pun here…). Really pretty. Poisonous, but only if you eat them!

  5. Dark_Foggy_Evenings on

    *Amanita Muscaria* or the Fly Agaric. Fun fact: Used (don’t try this at home, kids) as a ritual and recreational drug in ancient Europe and particularly on the island of Patmos, to where John (or whoever wrote the book of Revelation which was attributed to him) was exiled.

    I’m not stating it’s 100% established fact, nether can anyone…but all that stuff about lakes of fire, supernatural battles, descending dragons & angels breaking mystical seals probably make a lot more sense if we take into account the possibility that the author was sitting in a cave ripped to the tits on magic mushrooms.

  6. Pick them if you want, dehydrate (40 degrees for a good 4 or 5 hours) then put in a big mason jar they look awesome

  7. Boring_Intern_6394 on

    They’re native to UK and don’t kill other plants, I’d leave them alone

  8. Inspectadreck on

    They dont cause damage like the honey mushroom and they are less poisonous than they are made out to be.

  9. The common UK varieties won’t usually grow unless in the root area of silver birch trees or certain pine trees. They have a symbiotic relationship with the tree, exchanging nutrients via the large mycelial network that lives under the ground. Mushrooms and fungi that we see are merely the fruiting bodies of a much larger, diffuse organism.

    Absolutely no reason to eradicate them. It shows that the nutrient level of the soil is at least to the point it can support them but TBH I don’t believe this is an amazing sign as their requirements are quite specific but sure is not a bad sign.

  10. Georgi2024 on

    That’s cool, and looks like you have a partial fairy ring (the root network called mycelium in the ground grows outward like a tree trunk growing outwards).

  11. Reasonable-Fig7302 on

    Oh my goodness I wrote a huge piece about this and lost it, I’m new to reddit so will try again soon. thank you it’s all very interesting to me being a keen organic gardener of 50 years +

  12. Reasonable-Fig7302 on

    Lost my second reply to your post so will recap and post again thanks.☘️🍄💚🍀🪷🌳🎃

  13. VioletsSoul on

    That’s so exciting! I have some little yellow spindly fungi and a couple of brown mushrooms I couldn’t identify. Apparently it means the soil is healthy. It better be after all the leaves I left on it last year 😂

  14. K0monazmuk on

    Awesome to have them on your lawn!

    Something to look forward too every Autumn!

  15. MoonDragonII on

    They look beautiful but they’re potentially a health risk, I’ll come and remove them for you, if you like 😎. Seriously though, they look so nice you should consider them a magical gift to your lawn.

  16. Akeyl_Elwynn on

    I haven’t seen one of these in ages. I might go for a walk later today and try to look for mushrooms.

  17. aggelikiwi on

    I remember taking my poodle for a walk and saw some. Don’t even touch them. In Greece they are poisonous

  18. RevolutionaryHawk954 on

    This is a sign of good healthy soil and a lack of pollutants! If you want more next year pull one of those mushrooms and shake it about your garden! Spread them spores!!!!!

  19. chaosandturmoil on

    get your phone right down and take some macro shots like its a tree. they loook fantastic

Leave A Reply