The results of "hey, I found this mushroom in my back yard..... is it a 'shroom'?

canndo

Well-Known Member
LOOMIS, Calif. (AP) — A fourth person has died from eating a soup made with poisonous mushrooms earlier this month at senior care facility in Northern California, authorities said Tuesday.
The Placer County Sheriff's Department identified the woman as Dorothy Mary Hart, 92.
Three others at the six-bed Gold Age Villa care facility in Loomis died from eating the mushrooms in what sheriff's investigators characterize as an accident.
"This is an ongoing tragedy, an unfortunate accident," said Dena Erwin, spokeswoman for the sheriff's office.
All of the victims were sickened Nov. 8, including the caretaker who made the soup after picking mushrooms in the backyard of the facility.
The other people who have died were identified as Barbara Lopes, 86; Teresa Olesniewicz, 73; and Frank Warren Blodgett, 90.
California's Department of Social Services is investigating the incident, though sheriff's investigators have said the caretaker who made the soup did not know that the mushrooms were poisonous.
The most recent death occurred at a nursing home, where the victim was transferred from a Sacramento-area hospital.
Vomiting and diarrhea associated with mushroom poisoning can take 12 hours or longer to develop, which often makes it difficult to diagnose, said Dr. Kent R. Olson, medical director of the San Francisco division of the California Poison Control System.
The loss of fluids can cause kidney failure, but the poisons attack the liver and stop the organ from producing normal proteins. The victim usually falls into a coma, and the liver eventually shuts down and dies.
Fall begins the season for highly sought-after wild chanterelle mushrooms in Northern California, and for the amanita species of mushroom that include what are known as "death cap" and "death angel" varieties.


Now unfortunately, the amanitas are easily identified - the more poisonous of them all have vulvas but it makes no difference, the person picking them were probably sure that they were reasonable to eat.

PAY ATTENTION.
 

glShemp

Active Member
Steve Jobs never actually explained what caused him to lose his liver and he always got testy - very testy - when anyone asked him about it. We all know Mr. Jobs did psychedelics, so I think improperly identified wild mushrooms is the most likely explanation for how he lost his liver.
 

Skuxx

Well-Known Member
wait so this was 80-90+ year old people that thought they had some shrooms and died? that's just sad. wonder how old the "caretaker" was. and what the fuck they were thinking. do we have more info on what these people really took, and what they thought they were taking? was it amanitas? Those seem like they could kill an 80 year old whether they are the real deal or not... just shitty shroom altogether.
 

egon

Well-Known Member
Or maybe it was cause steve jobs was a dick. Lol


I hunt mushies sometimes.. but where I'm at there very easy to tell if they're right or not. Of course I haven't in a few years since I started growing at home..
 

D3monic

Well-Known Member
And let me guess.... the care taker didn't eat any and the residents recently changed their life insurance policies.
 

polyarcturus

Well-Known Member
no he said the care taker got sick.


hmmm, i dont know how i feel about this... i mean mistakes happen, but i would never guinea pig any wild mushroom on anyone without testing it on myself in low dose first, even if it was a fucking shitake and i knew it and had a reputable source tell me it was that. but thats just me, i know it took a lot of trial and error in the stone age to figure out good mushrooms vs bad one, but i know thier trials weren't, "here lets feed the whole tribe this shit..."
 

testtime

Well-Known Member
Steve Jobs never actually explained what caused him to lose his liver and he always got testy - very testy - when anyone asked him about it. We all know Mr. Jobs did psychedelics, so I think improperly identified wild mushrooms is the most likely explanation for how he lost his liver.
Interesting thought but I doubt it. He had pancreatic cancer. Well documented.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203476804576613722391627248.html

And he thought he could fix it by drinking enough juice.

https://www.google.com/webhp?q=steve+jobs+juice+cure&oq=steve+jobs+juice+cure

If you've heard him get testy about questions, sure, no one wants to talk about their imminent possibility of death, ESPECIALLY when it triggers shareholder panic. Add to the fact very few people agreed with his treatment, he would not want to expose himself to more ridicule. He was used to being the only right guy in the room. Why should this be any different?

I heard a great interview with his live-in biographer (the guy hung with him for a year, and the ONLY things Jobs changed was the cover picture of the book).

Jobs was crazy fucker, and incredibly difficult to deal with, and NO ONE would argue with him. It would haven taken a legal intervention to save him from himself. You can still get the interview on NPR.com if you look hard enough.
 

sonar

Well-Known Member
wait so this was 80-90+ year old people that thought they had some shrooms and died? that's just sad. wonder how old the "caretaker" was. and what the fuck they were thinking. do we have more info on what these people really took, and what they thought they were taking? was it amanitas? Those seem like they could kill an 80 year old whether they are the real deal or not... just shitty shroom altogether.
They thought they were eating a wild edible mushroom. I don't think their intent was a hallucinogenic experience.
 
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