Home / Bhutan 2019 110
- Netcapped King bolete - Boletus reticuloceps - growing in Ura, Bumthang, Bhutan
- Nice collection of this choice edible Boletus reticuloceps found under a few spruce trees
- Probably a Ditiola, Dacrymycetaceae, we called it the bell flower jelly fungus
- Ditiola sp., this one seen in the Tang Valley is much bigger than many of the Ditiolas.
- Lactarius subindigo looks lust like the new worlds Lactarius indigo. It is edible and enjoyable. I tested the Bhutan version without ill effects. L. subindigo is reported from China, Japan and New Guniea.
- Cheku showing beautiful Amanita caesareoides. We did not eat them, since they were clearly different from the common Himalayan Caesar Amanita hemibapha.
- A stinkhorn (Phallus impudicus) visited by Callimorpha principalis moth below CheleLa
- Amanita rubrovolvata just budding seen below Phadjoding
- Amanita rubrovolvata very young seen below Phadjoding
- Immature Amanita rubrovolvata, a probably toxic mushroom, seen near Phadjoding
- Sese Shamu aka Cantharellus cibarius growing near PeluLa
- Chanterelle Pizza made for us at Druk Hotel in Thimphu
- Bolerus karmesinus, now probably Butyriboletus or Exsidoporus karmesinus. Seen below Chele La.
- Red-purple tubes of Bolerus karmesinus, now probably Butyriboletus or Exsidoporus karmesinusbolete growing in a spruce forest
- Gorgeous Filoboletus manipularis? hymenium. They did not display bioluminescent in the dark.
- Filoboletus manipularis? seen above seen above Tingtibi, Zhemgang.
- A common wood decaying yellow Marasmius glowing in the sun above Tingtibi
- Mushroom display table at the Genekha mushroom festival provided by Bhutan's NMC
- Sacred dance at the Genekha mushroom festival
- This Golden-Grey Langur was licking salt right next to the road east of Zhemgang. It should be the rare hybrid between Gee's golden and Capped langur - Trachypithecus geei and T. pileatus.