Mycology
I don't put too much faith in iNat's computer vision algorithm, it frequently IDs anything orange as Hygrophoropsis aurantiaca even if it's a polypore. It also thinks most Amanitas are Inocybe albodisca which is a misapplied name for the PNW in the first place.
This looks like part of the Russula brevipes complex to me. I'm not the most experienced with this complex but nothing about it looks out of the ordinary for brevipes so I see no reason to think it might be anything else.
I've never heard of a Lactarius taking more than a few seconds to bleed (though I once missed the latex on Lactarius pseudomucidus and had no idea what the mushroom was until I finally noticed it when I was going through photos months later).
Thanks, I guess I've read that some are slower to bleed, maybe it can just seem that way depending on how much a particular species tends to bleed.
Have you tried tagging experts in the area you live in on iNat? If you give them the same information they should be able to tell (or not, but then you know you won't be able to ID it).
There a couple in my area so may do that.