Pileus: 7.5 — 15 cm, convex to broadly convex, margin deeply incurved at first, becoming revolute with age, dry, fibrillose or with small ochraceous brown scales, pale-yellow or ochraceous buff, flesh soft, whitish, yellowish near the gills.
Gills: Adnate to uncinate, close, thin, yellowish white becoming cinnamon.
Spore print: Orangish brown.
Stipe: 10 — 13 cm long, 2.5 – 5 cm. thick, equal or swelling in the middle, fleshy-fibrous, solid, elastic, fibrillose, concolorous, white within, the cortina leaves only a faint ring on the stalk. The specific epithetvalidipes means "having a robust stalk".
Taste: Mild, standing in contrast to closely related bitter-tasting species.
Gymnopilus validipes contains the hallucinogens psilocybin and psilocin, the former at a concentration of around 0.12%.[1]
Habitat and formation
Gymnopilus validipes is found growing gregarious (in groups) to cespitose (in dense clumps) on tree stumps, hardwood logs and debris, widespread in the United States, common from the Great Lakes and eastward.