In the wild mushroom world,聽聽is a legend. He has foraged聽all over the world since the 1970s, taught classes on how to find聽mushrooms for more than 30 years, and organized聽seminars for dozens of organizations. After Ian Frazier profiled him for聽国产吃瓜黑料聽in 2004, Evans became a local聽celebrity in his hometown聽of聽Missoula, Montana.聽As an amateur forager聽myself, I聽wanted to know about his聽kit, so I called Evans and asked for his top gear recommendations.
- 碍苍颈蹿别:听Evans uses a custom knife he manufactures and sells. It has a curved blade with teeth on the back, a brush on the bottom, and a ruler on the handle. 鈥淭he blade curves so you can use the knife at a slight angle to cut a mushroom. It鈥檚 good for poking in between stumps and things,鈥 Evans says. The teeth and brush remove as much dirt聽from the mushroom as possible without cutting pieces off. The ruler helps with identification. 鈥淚t鈥檚 nice to take a picture with [a ruler] because someone can look at the picture and have something for scale. Not everyone鈥檚 hand is the same size,鈥 Evans says.
- Backpack:聽Evans hacked his pack聽so he can carry lots of mushrooms without squishing any. He starts with an old external frame bag, then removes the body to reveal just the frame and harness. Next he attaches a board to the base of the frame,聽then stacks commercial fruit bins (usually about four) on top. Each bin is tied to the frame for support and聽so it doesn鈥檛 come loose. Fully loaded, Evans聽can carry about 80 pounds of fungi.
- Shirt:聽When Evans doesn鈥檛 want to carry a pack, he just uses his shirt to carry the mushrooms. As a clever hack, he sews buttons on the collar, then creates corresponding holes at聽the bottom聽so he can attach the bottom of the shirt to the collar, creating聽a tub that allows him to聽work hands-free. 鈥淚t looks really ridiculous,鈥 Evans says.
- Footwear:聽鈥淚鈥檓 not a good role model here,鈥 Evans says. 鈥淚 used to wear Red Wings and waffle stompers, but as I got older, I guess I got tougher.鈥 Nowadays he just wears sandals, but I鈥檇 recommend something like the 聽because you鈥檒l likely be in the backcountry and need a solid boot for protection and聽scrambling.聽
- Water:聽Finding mushrooms聽can take a long time and a lot of walking.聽鈥淢ost mushroom hunt聽failures are caused by dehydration, at least here in Montana,鈥 Evans聽says. He knows the area where he forages, so he brings a couple standard water bottles and refills them straight from local streams. I鈥檓 more cautious, so if I鈥檓 going to be out for a long time and need to refill in a stream, I bring a simple, reliable physical filtration device like the .
- GPS Device:聽It鈥檚 easy to get lost foraging because you鈥檙e looking at the ground and not paying attention to where you鈥檙e wandering. 鈥淓veryone is going to get lost. It鈥檚 just learning how to get found,鈥 Evans says. He doesn't carry one, but suggests all new foragers use a GPS device just in case. I like the聽聽because it鈥檚 easy to use and offers weather radar overlays so you can avoid getting聽caught in a storm.