MO Missouri Porch

Foraging & Collecting

What's new this year

The basics haven't changed — pick for your own table, identify before you eat, and ask first. But a couple of things are worth knowing this year.

Wild ginseng

A harvester permit is required

If you plan to dig wild ginseng, the current rules call for a permit. Here is what each one costs:

  • Annual Harvest Permit $20 residents / $150 nonresidents
  • Dealer Permit $100 residents / $300 nonresidents
  • Root certification fee $25

Landowners harvesting on their own land need no permit — but to sell, they need a no-cost Landowner Harvest Authorization Number, plus certification to sell to anyone who doesn't hold a Dealer Permit.

As of the current rules, harvest requirements apply to all ginseng, including cultivated and woods-grown.

Read the full ginseng guide

Spring mushrooms

Morels run on the weather, not the calendar

Morel season doesn't follow a fixed date. A warm, wet spring can start the run weeks early, and a cold, dry one can hold it back. Go by soil temperature and recent rain rather than the page of a calendar — and remember that finding them early doesn't change the one rule that matters most.

Never eat any wild mushroom unless you've positively identified it as a safe edible and cooked it thoroughly. This page teaches principles — it is not a substitute for a field guide and an experienced eye.

Read the mushroom safety guide

Before you gather

Missouri Porch explains; the landowner and the land manager decide.

Last checked: 2026-06-18. Rules differ by land type and change over time — and eating a wild plant or mushroom is a health decision, not a website decision. When in doubt, ask the land manager, check a field guide, and don't eat anything you can't name with certainty.

This is a plain-English summary, not legal advice. Foraging and collecting rules change and depend on whose land you're on and what you're taking — always confirm with the landowner or land manager before you gather. For a suspected poisoning, call Poison Control at 1-800-222-1222 or 911.

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