2.5-3 inch tall mushroom found growing on slope in pine and leaf litter under mature Douglas Firs. Stem is centrally attached, clean and white, not hollow. Cap is flat and quite uniformly grey on top with thin white ring at margin. Gills are well spaced and narrowly attached.
Unsure of ID. Visually similar to Amanita persicina but should not be based on global location.
Small, about 5cm tall mushroom found growing on sloped mossy lawn by sidewalk. One or two dozen individuals seen across the slope with varying spacing. Stem was black with lots of white powdery appearing coating, evenly tapered with what looks like hyphae strands near the base. Costing of stem may be excessive on the one I grabbed as others look darker. Cap is flat, top is very dark brown, nearly black with light striping visible through cap running umbo to margin. Pattern on many individuals is darkest outside the umbo, yet the center point of the cap is slightly lighter. Gills on underside appear lighter colored though tinted by the dark cap and unattached or slightly attached to cap. No universal or partial veil.
Small, 1-2 inch transparent mushroom found growing in mature forest on the ground heavy with moss. Somewhat familiar shape, cap is more unidirectional, growing upwards and facing one direction. Tiny tooth like formations on underside of cap. Texture was gelatinous and easily squishable, tore like a gummy. Very strange texture to find naturally. Surface of fungus was slightly granular in texture, but the interior tissue was glassy and pure gelatin.
Large mushroom about 6 inches tall found growing in mature forest, out of mossy ground substrate beside a fallen branch. Stem and top of cap have deep purple color. Stem is patterned in vertical stripes, tapered upward. Cap is flat, top of cap is purple and scaly looking, rough textured appearance, not viscid or wet at all. Pores on cap underside, by contrast, are almost yellow in appearance. Stem not hollow.
5-6 inch tall, funnel shaped mushroom found growing on debris heavy section of mature forest substrate. Gills on exterior, decurrent, run down the white to pale-yellow body. Gills have veiny appearance and seem to be crossveined/networked. Top of funnel was slightly depressed with quite the texture. Appearing torn up, shaggy, or like an infected wound, the appearance of rot. Top of cap had most color, deeper orange to red along with grey and brown. Bisected individual shows orange to white gradient within the core.
A couple patches found in open grassy area on an unusually warm October day. Mature Douglas Firs within a few dozen feet. Plate-like formation with dark brown topside, rings of lighter brown near margins. Underside is porous and lighter colored. Very large in size, sections growing to a foot or more across.
Found multiple large patches of small mushrooms growing near somewhat open grassy area, all patches at base of Black Cottonwood trees. Individuals only standing to about 5 inches at the tallest, some seemed younger while others appeared to be turning darker inky color. Younger ones had light tan stems with darker but still mild tan caps. Underside was noticeably darker, with grey black ink color. Prints in progress. Proximity, growth habit and multiple individuals of varying life cycle progress point to these different colored patches being the same species
Dense colony of light yellowish mushrooms found in forested area growing in a tight colony off a log very near a few Red Alders, log may be Alder as well, seems a few years decayed. Caps convex with individuals about 4-6 inches tall. Gills do seem somewhat attached to the stipe. Color on cap gets stronger nearer the umbo.