Clitocybe flaccida (Sowerby) P. Kumm., Tricholomatace Agaricales This is the biggest Clitocybe and well-studied in this location. It is a long-living kind and young mushrooms look rather different from old ones. Synonyms: Clitocybe gilva (Fr.) Kumm. = Spotty Clitocybe = Ð"овоÑÑÑка бÑÑо-желÑÐ°Ñ Ð¸Ð»Ð¸ ÑÑдовка воднопÑÑниÑÑаÑ. Cap: 5-10cm wide (up to 15cm when very old), convex up to flat or sunken with age, margin curved in when young, often wavy when old; often irregular colored and spotty, light pink and pale pinkish-yellow, brownish-yellow and light-orange with 1-8mm rounded light pink or red-brown some overlapped spots and whitish margin, sometimes with weak concentric picture and central darker spot, often dull yellow-orange and red-orange when very old and dry. Flesh is white or somewhat dull cream, odor is pleasant. Gills: descending stalk, narrow, close up to crowded when old, some branching by two when young, whitish or pinkish, light cream up to brownish-pink when old. Stalk: 4-8cm long, 0.8-1.6cm thick and sometimes enlarged from the center up and down; upper part whitish or cream up to dull reddish-brown toward a basement. Edibility: no accurate data for this location; published that not poisons after boiling 15 minutes, people gather it in some locations of Russia. Habitat: common kind only in rainy summer, small groups or clusters scattered on soil in pine-tree forest with rare birches. It is rare situation when to find young, adult, old and very old mushrooms in one group as a long belt (rainy warm summer and a desert place). People often cut these young mushrooms by mistake, because they are beautiful and look as some Lactarius, but no milk. Season: July - August.