Noodles, our forest produced morels last winter for the first time in about twenty years, probably because our area has had several major bushfires recently, and many species of morel are fire-followers. They are delicious, just make sure you don't pick False Morels instead. Those are supposed to be edible with a lot of preparation, but I don't trust them. Your Spring forest sounds lovely.
Sc0ut, yeah, the climate change apocalypse is a real thing. I've been trying for years to get people to take it seriously, because there are so many things that are happening downstream from the obvious changes that will not become apparent until they actually hit us. Stuff like the loss of pollinating insect and bird species and the decline of soil biota on which depend things like seed germination and plant nutrient uptake. All we can do is plant a wide range of food species, keep trying new things, conserve water, protect the soil surface (mulch, mulch, mulch), and do our best to limit the damage we cause. I think we can survive as a species, but we need to think more about the consequences of our actions.
Peter Cundall, a gardener whom I greatly respect, calls it 'climate disruption' rather than 'climate change'. I reckon he has a point. Look him up online, he has a lot of good advice on how to garden in current conditions, and he is just a very nice man as well as a skilled gardener. He isn't giving up either.