Trusting Your Own Judgment
The majority of the time I trust my own judgement. I have the confidence that I know enough to make a choice and so I do it. There are other times I "phone a friend" or ask the advice of someone with whom I have previously associated with and trust. There are times, though, when nothing will satisfy me but an expert and then I have doubts.
I am not one to order mushrooms at a restaurant. If they come with a dish I don't pick them off or send the plate back, but I just am not a fan. I know they have nutritional value and many kinds of mushrooms are highly valued for their flavor. I would rather have my steak with a little salt and maybe some butter, but you can leave off the mushrooms.
Mushrooms, toadstools and other fungi do interest me. I smile upon seeing a "fairy ring" growing in the yard, or fantastic growths on the side of a rotting log. I almost always stop and look at mushrooms. Maybe I'm looking for the fairly or elf taking shelter beneath its cap, or maybe I just find them to be so alien to me that I am intrigued.
I use a phone application called iNaturalist for identifying plants, insects, reptiles and yes, fungi. Yesterday I noticed an interesting dark yellow cap poking through the soil near our fire pit and snapped a photo to determine what it was. It identified as the Yellow American Blusher (Amanita flavorubens) which is an edible mushroom. The problem is that it is in the Amanita genus which contains a number of lethally poisonous mushrooms. If you aren't an expert mycologist, don't take a chance with this one. If you are, bon appetite!

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