mountains and mushrooms
Aug. 30th, 2010 02:44 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
On Sunday, Britt and I climbed 12,504' Grayrock Peak:

Huh, I wonder why it's called that? :-) It's actually a semi-detached point at the southeast end of a long, flat lump of rock called Graysill Mountain, connected by a skinny ridge. (In this photo, I'm standing at the end of Graysill looking at the ridge and the Grayrock summit.) We had actually tried to climb it from the east last year; we'd gotten lost and ended up wandering around a cliffy steep face that was no fun at all before picking our way down again. This time we drove around to the southwest and hiked up an old, closed logging road that eventually petered out into a trail, which eventually disappeared entirely, but by that time we were above treeline and just aimed for the high point.

On the ridge heading for the summit

In the shelter at the summit. You can see the Purgatory ski area (where I ski in the winter) in the background.
Some views from Grayrock: from the ridge, looking northeast to Engineer Mountain and the Weminuche Wilderness, with Grayrock's nasty north ridge in the foreground, and looking north from the summit toward Lizard Head (the rock "finger") and the mountains near Telluride.


The slopes of Graysill from where we parked around 10,200 to a bit above treeline were thick with mushrooms. This has been a banner year in Colorado for wild mushrooms. Last Sunday we went on a dayhike specifically to look for and collect them, and we came back with something more than 20 pounds of mostly Hawk's Wings and King Boletes (as well as a few random samples of other things to try or investigate); on our way down from the peak, we collected Saffron Milkcaps (Lactarius deliciosus) and King Boletes (Boletus edulis). Our dehydrator has been running nonstop, and we've been eating mushrooms with nearly every meal, yum!



Lactarius is a weird mushroom; it's a sort of pale orange with deeper orange gills, but when it's cut or bruised it exudes a "milk" (thus the name) which upon contact with air...turns green. So you end up with this orange and green mushroom which frankly looks rather unappetizing. Fortunately, when it's cooked (or dried) it turns boringly brown. And it tastes pretty yummy.
The weather was pretty marginal all day, but it didn't start actually raining until we got back to the vehicle. (And then it hailed!)

Huh, I wonder why it's called that? :-) It's actually a semi-detached point at the southeast end of a long, flat lump of rock called Graysill Mountain, connected by a skinny ridge. (In this photo, I'm standing at the end of Graysill looking at the ridge and the Grayrock summit.) We had actually tried to climb it from the east last year; we'd gotten lost and ended up wandering around a cliffy steep face that was no fun at all before picking our way down again. This time we drove around to the southwest and hiked up an old, closed logging road that eventually petered out into a trail, which eventually disappeared entirely, but by that time we were above treeline and just aimed for the high point.

On the ridge heading for the summit

In the shelter at the summit. You can see the Purgatory ski area (where I ski in the winter) in the background.
Some views from Grayrock: from the ridge, looking northeast to Engineer Mountain and the Weminuche Wilderness, with Grayrock's nasty north ridge in the foreground, and looking north from the summit toward Lizard Head (the rock "finger") and the mountains near Telluride.


The slopes of Graysill from where we parked around 10,200 to a bit above treeline were thick with mushrooms. This has been a banner year in Colorado for wild mushrooms. Last Sunday we went on a dayhike specifically to look for and collect them, and we came back with something more than 20 pounds of mostly Hawk's Wings and King Boletes (as well as a few random samples of other things to try or investigate); on our way down from the peak, we collected Saffron Milkcaps (Lactarius deliciosus) and King Boletes (Boletus edulis). Our dehydrator has been running nonstop, and we've been eating mushrooms with nearly every meal, yum!



Lactarius is a weird mushroom; it's a sort of pale orange with deeper orange gills, but when it's cut or bruised it exudes a "milk" (thus the name) which upon contact with air...turns green. So you end up with this orange and green mushroom which frankly looks rather unappetizing. Fortunately, when it's cooked (or dried) it turns boringly brown. And it tastes pretty yummy.
The weather was pretty marginal all day, but it didn't start actually raining until we got back to the vehicle. (And then it hailed!)
(no subject)
Date: 2010-08-30 10:17 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-08-30 10:28 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-08-30 10:35 pm (UTC)For a big cultivated mushroom area, we don't have many interesting wild mushrooms in this area. ~jealous~
(no subject)
Date: 2010-08-30 10:49 pm (UTC)I don't really know eastern mushrooms very well! When Britt and I were on the east coast camping from FL to ME, we sometimes saw mushrooms but they weren't the ones we knew, so we didn't touch them. And actually I don't know that many mushrooms at all, just the really tasty ones that can't be confused with anything else.
(no subject)
Date: 2010-08-31 12:39 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-09-02 10:22 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-08-31 02:37 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-09-02 10:22 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-08-31 04:30 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2010-09-02 10:23 pm (UTC)We are careful, promise!