IELTS Listening: Multiple Choice: Mushrooms

Sometimes you need to choose TWO answers from a list labelled A to D (or E), so you have to be quicker to extract 2 different things from a specific part of the recording.

This lesson is about the joys of mushrooming! The original is from VOA Learning English and can be found here.

Words in This Story

  • forage – v. to search for something (such as food or supplies)
  • hike – v. to walk a long distance especially for pleasure or exercise
  • edible – n. something to be eaten
  • shrub – n. a low usually several-stemmed woody plant
  • fungus – n. organisms once classified as plants that lack the green coloring chlorophyll
  • fiber – n. plant material that cannot be digested but that helps you to digest other food
  • club – n. a group or organization of people who share common interests
  • diagnose – v. to recognize (something, such as a disease) by signs and symptoms : misdiagnose – v. to diagnose incorrectly
  • endeavor – n. a serious effort or attempt

Listen to the recording and choose a letter as your answer to each question

1 and 2: Which TWO kinds of people enjoy mushroom hunting?

  • A: gourmets
  • B: chefs
  • C: farmers
  • D: foresters
  • E: foragers

3 and 4: Mushroom hunting gives you a chance to see more of which TWO things?

  • A: big animals
  • B: the sky
  • C: bushes
  • D: hikers
  • E: animals flying around you

5 and 6: People enjoy mushrooming for which TWO reasons?

  • A: the social activity
  • B: it’s lucrative
  • C: chance discovery
  • D: fungus can be exciting
  • E: the  ideas about death and dying

7 and 8: Which TWO health benefits are obtained from eating mushrooms

  • A: better kidney function
  • B: better liver function
  • C: protection against disease
  • D: enhanced tumour growth
  • E: promotion of cancer

Answers, transcript and clues below the image

  1. A
  2. E
  3. C
  4. E
  5. B
  6. C
  7. B
  8. C

Mushroom Hunting Gains Popularity

What used to be an outdoor activity for only extreme foodies is now becoming more and more popular in many parts of the United States. I am talking about mushroom hunting! Mushroom hunters – also called foragers — spend hours, even days, in wooded areas searching for wild mushrooms.

Dennis Aita lives in New York City. He has been a mushroom hunter since the 1980s. He first became interested in them while exploring the Appalachian Trail in the 1970s. As he hiked, he began noticing mushrooms and other wild edibles. So, he decided to try foraging for mushrooms.

Aita says mushroom foraging changed his relationship with the environment. When hiking, he says, he would walk quickly and not see much of the plants and trees around him. However, to find mushrooms, you must walk slowly. “Um, by looking for mushrooms, you tend to slow up a little bit. You get a chance to see the birds. You get a chance to see the trees and shrubs, little animal life and everything.”

So, it is necessary to pay close attention to the details on trees and on the ground. But this presents its own problem. Mushroom foragers, with their heads turned downward, can easily get lost in the woods. In the States, people have died after spending all night unprotected in the cold woods — lost while hunting mushrooms.

So, what makes people go out for hours and hours searching for a fungus? Mushrooms, after all, are often found growing from dead and dying things in the woods. Well, some people just love mushrooms! They love finding them in unexpected places. They love cooking them. And they love eating them. Many restaurants buy different kinds of mushrooms for the meals they prepare. So foraging can be profitable.

Mushrooms grow very well in wet climates. Some countries in Europe, parts of Russia, Japan and Iran are known for having different mushrooms as well as a food culture based on mushroom foraging. Dennis Aita has traveled to Canada, Italy, India, Nepal and Argentina in search of mushrooms. He says some cultures seem to like them more than others.

“…You go to Italy, not only do you go mushroom hunting, but of course, there’s great food there, and they cook with mushrooms in a very big way. Italians, they love mushrooms. Most of the Europeans eat mushrooms. Many of the Asians do. But, um, there are certain cultures that don’t.”

Health benefits: Experts say eating mushrooms can be good for your health. Mushrooms contain the mineral selenium. This mineral helps the liver to work properly. The mineral also helps to prevent infection in the body and may decrease the growth of cancerous tumors. Most fruits and vegetables do not have selenium.

Mushrooms may also help you to lose weight. They are high in fiber – some more than others. So, they can make us feel fuller for long periods. As a result, we eat less.

Mushroom are healthy (except for the ones that can kill you): So mushrooms are good for you and can be tasty. But foraging on your own can be dangerous. For those who have never been mushroom hunting, but want to start, Dennis Aita has one important suggestion: do not do it alone!

“Well, they should join a club – a mushroom club. If there’s a club in your area – that’s the best way to learn about, you know, which mushrooms to eat. You go on walks. And then you start to learn which books to buy. You know, you buy a few mushroom books with some pictures. And that’s the best way to do it.”

Deadly mushrooms: With mushroom foraging, it is important to know that some mushrooms can kill you. The online Encyclopedia Britannica lists the most deadly ones and gives pictures of each. One thing that makes some mushrooms so deadly is that they look like perfectly common, edible mushrooms. So they are sometimes collected and eaten by mistake. For example, the Death Cap is perhaps “the deadliest of all mushrooms.” Found throughout Europe, it looks similar to two types of edible mushrooms.

Another thing that makes poisonous mushrooms so deadly is that signs of poisoning can take a long time to show. Or they show themselves and then go away. People think that they are in good health and fail to get proper treatment. Sometimes the signs are similar to influenza. So, mushroom poisoning can easily be misdiagnosed.

For whatever reason, if left untreated, mushroom poisoning can result in serious health conditions, like kidney failure, or even death. That is why Aita warns beginners to go out foraging with experienced mushroom hunters. “As I say, it’s very dangerous. People really should not go out to the woods and come back with things and start eating mushrooms. No. It can be a deadly endeavor.”

About Paul Davey

I’m Paul from Bristol, England. I am an IELTS tutor available for face-to-face classes in Taipei and Skype classes anywhere in the world. I'm based in Yonghe, New Taipei City — very close to Taipei. I have been teaching for many years and I am good at it. I’m patient and never tire of correcting students’ mistakes. I know many good ways for students to learn quickly and make a lot of progress in a short time. You won’t be wasting your money. I especially know the difficulties faced by Chinese speakers, and I know how to overcome these difficulties. IELTS is my primary concern and over the years I have taught hundreds of students in the UK, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and other spots around the world. I know what the examiners look for and I know how to increase your band and get the grade you need to make your dream come true. I have been blogging about IELTS for about a decade. I started my first website in 2007, before beginning to blog at IELTS Tutor on the Hello UK website. Now I blog only at IELTS in Taiwan and Around the World. I majored in Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia, UK, graduating with a bachelor’s degree (2/1 with honours). I obtained my language-teaching qualification in 2006, which is accredited by the Royal College of Teachers. Before I began teaching, I worked in a software company in the UK, writing and selling software solutions. After teaching for many years I took a five-year break to run my own retailing business. Following that adventure, I returned to full-time teaching. For the last 11 years, I’ve been in Taiwan, where in addition to my IELTS work, I have taught corporate classes at Taipei Bank, Pfizer, and Chinese Petroleum Corporation (CPC, Taiwan). I have interests in many fields including travel, literature, science and history.
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