@lifewithsal thanks for your comment and for subscribing. For some reason, your comment is hidden. I’ve been a fan and subscriber to your channel for a long time and enjoy your fishing, crabbing and mushroom hunting videos. We should get out there together some time!
Dan Handorff, thanks for your comment. That’s very interesting. I usually find the coast chanterelles are smaller than the mountain chanterelles but it’s been a great year for the coast mushrooms for sure.
What a great day out in the woods!! Those lobsters were massive! I can’t wait to find some of my own. How late do you think they’ll be in the coast range this year? What GPS model do you use again? I tried using the OnX Hunt to mark my last locations but unfortunately without service, they mapped way off the path.
Tavin Sprague, thanks for your comments. Lobsters are winding down with this wet weather we are having but I’m betting there are still some fresh ones out there. Lots of other interesting edible mushrooms aside from lobsters and chanterelles start to show up in the coast range in November, so there’s still time to fill your basket. My GPS is a Garmin 64st. Love it. Newest model is the 66st.
@@DADventurerNW thanks for the note on the lobsters! I’ll be out on the coast this weekend so hopefully I’ll still be able to see some and get a few to keep. I’ll have to do some more research on the other edibles that are going to be popping up on the coast so I’m prepared! Appreciate the note on the GPS as well! It’s going to be a huge help for follow up trips as you noted.
Those Chanterelles look fresh! Must be a newer crop, ones I've been finding are a little older. Maybe it is related to aspect, most of my hunting happens on north facing not south.
Chris Burgess, yes I was lucky to find some of those early season, fresh chanterelles, after only finding older ones for several weeks. I believe this was about a week after a good rain, which always helps with new mushroom flushes. Thanks for watching.
Ashleyjade1983, thanks for watching and your question. I believe mount hood is getting freezing temps this week and snow at 3500ft, so I think mushrooms will soon be done up there. I’m sticking to the coast range and found some great mushrooms there last weekend. Good luck.
You mention different slope angles for lobsters and chanterelles in this video, are these well known by hunters or based on your experience? Is it north east for chanterelle and south west for lobsters? Thanks 😊
Meg B, Thanks for watching and your question. I don't know if other mushroom hunters use slopes when determining where to hunt, but I use them all the time, and based on my experience, they work. The slope direction of a hill dictates how much sun exposure that slope may get in a day, whether it will be morning, afternoon all day or no day sun, and those may impact how the mushrooms react. I'm no biologist, just a mushroom nerd. However, if I'm looking for early fruiting mushrooms, I'm hunting south facing slopes as they will have the most sunshine, and the dirt will warm up quicker. Conversely, dur our dry late summer when things were very dry, I was hunting north facing slopes, with the least amount of sun exposure because those would be holding more moisture than any other slope, where the south facing slopes were bone dry. For lobsters and chanterelles, I generally find them on sloped ground more abundantly than on flat ground. Now, that could be because fewer people venture onto the slopes because it's tougher terrain, or it could just be better ground for mushrooms to grow. Let me know if this helps. Thanks for watching.
@lifewithsal thanks for your comment and for subscribing. For some reason, your comment is hidden.
I’ve been a fan and subscriber to your channel for a long time and enjoy your fishing, crabbing and mushroom hunting videos. We should get out there together some time!
Another great video. Thank you so much!
Steve Jonas, thanks for watching and your support.
Great video. I'm finding chantrelles in the Tillamook are much larger/ Fuller than the chantrelles near Mt Adams.....just observation...
Dan Handorff, thanks for your comment. That’s very interesting. I usually find the coast chanterelles are smaller than the mountain chanterelles but it’s been a great year for the coast mushrooms for sure.
What a great day out in the woods!! Those lobsters were massive! I can’t wait to find some of my own. How late do you think they’ll be in the coast range this year?
What GPS model do you use again? I tried using the OnX Hunt to mark my last locations but unfortunately without service, they mapped way off the path.
Tavin Sprague, thanks for your comments. Lobsters are winding down with this wet weather we are having but I’m betting there are still some fresh ones out there. Lots of other interesting edible mushrooms aside from lobsters and chanterelles start to show up in the coast range in November, so there’s still time to fill your basket.
My GPS is a Garmin 64st. Love it. Newest model is the 66st.
@@DADventurerNW thanks for the note on the lobsters! I’ll be out on the coast this weekend so hopefully I’ll still be able to see some and get a few to keep. I’ll have to do some more research on the other edibles that are going to be popping up on the coast so I’m prepared!
Appreciate the note on the GPS as well! It’s going to be a huge help for follow up trips as you noted.
Those Chanterelles look fresh! Must be a newer crop, ones I've been finding are a little older. Maybe it is related to aspect, most of my hunting happens on north facing not south.
Chris Burgess, yes I was lucky to find some of those early season, fresh chanterelles, after only finding older ones for several weeks. I believe this was about a week after a good rain, which always helps with new mushroom flushes. Thanks for watching.
Would you recommend Mt Hood or Tillamook Forest this late in the fall? Had luck with golden chanty's out toward the coast last week.
Ashleyjade1983, thanks for watching and your question. I believe mount hood is getting freezing temps this week and snow at 3500ft, so I think mushrooms will soon be done up there. I’m sticking to the coast range and found some great mushrooms there last weekend. Good luck.
@@DADventurerNW Great advice. Should be a beautiful weekend. Thank you for sharing your knowledge!
@@ashleyjade1983 any time! I hope you get into some great mushrooms!
You mention different slope angles for lobsters and chanterelles in this video, are these well known by hunters or based on your experience? Is it north east for chanterelle and south west for lobsters? Thanks 😊
Meg B, Thanks for watching and your question. I don't know if other mushroom hunters use slopes when determining where to hunt, but I use them all the time, and based on my experience, they work.
The slope direction of a hill dictates how much sun exposure that slope may get in a day, whether it will be morning, afternoon all day or no day sun, and those may impact how the mushrooms react. I'm no biologist, just a mushroom nerd. However, if I'm looking for early fruiting mushrooms, I'm hunting south facing slopes as they will have the most sunshine, and the dirt will warm up quicker. Conversely, dur our dry late summer when things were very dry, I was hunting north facing slopes, with the least amount of sun exposure because those would be holding more moisture than any other slope, where the south facing slopes were bone dry. For lobsters and chanterelles, I generally find them on sloped ground more abundantly than on flat ground. Now, that could be because fewer people venture onto the slopes because it's tougher terrain, or it could just be better ground for mushrooms to grow.
Let me know if this helps. Thanks for watching.
@@DADventurerNW just saw your comment, thank you for this info! That makes a lot of sense. Mental note taken :)
@@MissMMarieB you are most welcome.
Amazing thank you so much.
David McMullen, thanks for watching and your comment. I appreciate the support.
Thumbs up!
What parts of the coast?
Olga Hubenya, thanks for your question. These were from the northern oregon coast range.