Very like an oyster mushroom. Off center stipe. Glaborus cap. Decurrent gills. Growth on dead wood (but chips in this case). I've rarely seen oyster mushrooms on anything but trees; usually at the bark/cambium interface of fallen or dead standing trees. The color is entirely new to me on anything this closely resembling P. ostreatus, but my experience with this species is from Colorado and on specimens found on one pine, many aspen and cottonwood, and a few poplar. These gills seem to diverge and converge, something pretty rare to my observations. Taste is mild as is the odor. No fine hairs on cap.<> Phyllotopsis nidulans. That adjacent log is so dark that I'd call it Monterey pine. It's too dark for coastal live oak and that about encompasses all of the options for a log of that size in these woods. Any suggestions?