Humboldt’s Wild Fungi & Foraging Culture

Hey, it’s us again. If you’ve been here for even five minutes during a rainy fall day, you’ve probably overheard someone whispering about a chanterelle spot or seen a muddy Subaru with a suspiciously full basket in the back. Mushroom season isn’t just a hobby here—it’s a quiet obsession.

This guide is for the curious, the cautious, and the folks who want to walk a little slower through the woods, eyes on the duff and dreams of gold.

chanterelle foraging

When to Go (and Why It Matters)

Best Season: Mid-August  through early December (sometimes longer if the rains stay kind). Late winter (February) can have a second wave of hedgehogs and trumpets.

Why Timing Counts: Fungi don’t follow calendars—they follow moisture and temperature. A good week of rain followed by sun? That’s your signal. Bring a basket.

What to Look For

🍄 Chanterelles
Golden, trumpet-shaped, and growing in clusters under Douglas fir and spruce. 

🧡 Hedgehog Mushrooms
Look like chanterelles from above, but flip them over—they have little spines instead of gills. Mild and nutty.

🖤 Black Trumpets
Harder to find. Black-gray with a deep, smoky flavor. Grow in mossy hollows and leaf litter. Pure magic.

🍖 Lobster Mushrooms
Bright orange-red and weirdly meaty. Technically a fungus growing on another fungus. Great in tacos.

Where to Go (and What Not to Do)

Go Slow & Look Down

  • Around Sue-meg State Park: Tucked-off trails are best. Stay low and quiet.
  • Around Prairie Creek / Cal Barrel Road: A favorite among locals. Tons of moss, shade, and diversity.
  • Big Lagoon Forest Edge: Less trafficked and full of surprises.

Don’t…

  • Forage in state parks without knowing the rules. 
  • Pick mushrooms near roads, logging cuts, or areas with questionable runoff.
  • Ever eat something unless you’re 100% sure. Not 80%. Not even 95%. A real 100%.

What to Bring

  • Mesh basket or paper bags (not plastic—mushrooms rot fast)
  • Mushroom knife (one with a brush helps)
  • Field guide: “Mushrooms of the Redwood Coast” is the local bible
  • Layers and waterproof boots
  • Curiosity and time to wander

 

mushroom foraging on the table

Cooking Them Right

Cleaning: Gently brush off dirt. Don’t soak—mushrooms are like sponges.

Ideas:

  • Chanterelles with garlic and thyme on sourdough toast
  • Black trumpet pasta with cream and cracked pepper
  • Hedgehog mushroom risotto

Final Spores

Mushroom hunting is more than a meal—it’s a mindset. It’s about walking slow, looking close, and tuning in to the forest’s quiet whisper. Whether you come home with a basket full or just a better mood, you win either way.

See you in the duff,

Lisa & Taylor
Camp Trinidad