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Edibility
Edible
Lookalike Danger
3 / 5
Habitat
🪵 Oak stumps
Season
Sep – Nov
"One Oregon organism spans 2,400 acres — the largest living thing on Earth. Always cook."
Mushroom ID is a rule-out game. Every entry below describes something that looks similar — learn the differences before eating.

Honey mushrooms have WHITE SPORE PRINTS, cream gills, and grow in big clusters from wood with a distinctive ring. Deadly galerinas have RUST-BROWN SPORE PRINTS, brown gills, and grow singly or in small groups ON THE SAME WOOD. Always take a spore print before eating honeys.

Sulphur tufts have GREENISH-YELLOW GILLS darkening to olive-purple, extremely BITTER taste, and tight clusters on wood. Honey mushrooms have CREAM to pale-pink gills and a mild mushroomy taste. When in doubt, taste a tiny piece raw and spit — bitter = stop.
This species is found with or partners with the following hosts. Ectomycorrhizal hosts (green border) form a root-level partnership; ericoid / arbutoid shrubs (purple border) share the same mycorrhizal networks.

Truffle / bolete / chanterelle host. Acorns edible after leaching.
Honey-colored mushrooms in dense clusters at the base of trees. Notorious tree killer — produces the largest organism on Earth via underground rhizomorph networks (a single Oregon Armillaria covers 3.4 square miles). Must be thoroughly cooked.
Base of living or dead hardwoods and conifers — clusters on stumps, roots, and buried wood. Parasitic to saprophytic. Cosmopolitan across North America. Fall fruiting after the first cool rains.
Min Soil Temp
52°F
Moisture Need
rain 0.5in 10d
Drought Tolerance
moderate
Elevation Range
0–10,064 ft
DEADLY — contains amatoxins. Smaller, rusty brown cap, grows on hardwood logs. Honey mushrooms have a persistent ring on the stem; Galerina does not. Spore prints differ: honey is white, Galerina is rust-brown.
Toxic — severe GI distress. Grows in clusters on hardwood stumps. Orange (not honey) color. True gills that glow in the dark.
Honey mushroom clusters at the base of living or recently-dead trees. Cosmopolitan — look for black shoestring rhizomorphs under bark near productive stumps.
Photograph it and log your observation on iNaturalist. The community can help confirm your ID — always get confirmation before eating.