On Dec 28, 2021, at 11:39 PM, Henk Terhell wrote:
> For me it is not unusual to see clusters of mushrooms on dead and
> almost dead trees.Seeing fungi on the trunk of a living tree is
> usually a bad sign.
> My own record is this picture of honey fungi:
> https://flic.kr/p/2hvrRRR
Wow, that's
Incredible!
Alan C
On 28-Dec-21 12:39 PM, Henk Terhell wrote:
For me it is not unusual to see clusters of mushrooms on dead and
almost dead trees.Seeing fungi on the trunk of a living tree is
usually a bad sign.
My own record is this picture of honey fungi:
https://flic.kr/p/2hvrRRR
Henk
Op
Í don't know. Contrary to eastern and southern Europeans, most people
in our area have little knowledge of the edibility of mushrooms and
are cautious therefore.
And it is officially forbidden to gather mushrooms in our nature reservates.
I once followed a short course in fungi and in the field
wow - how long before somone 'harvested" them?
ann
On 12/28/2021 5:39 AM, Henk Terhell wrote:
For me it is not unusual to see clusters of mushrooms on dead and
almost dead trees.Seeing fungi on the trunk of a living tree is
usually a bad sign.
My own record is this picture of honey fungi:
For me it is not unusual to see clusters of mushrooms on dead and
almost dead trees.Seeing fungi on the trunk of a living tree is
usually a bad sign.
My own record is this picture of honey fungi:
https://flic.kr/p/2hvrRRR
Henk
Op di 28 dec. 2021 om 02:36 schreef David Mann :
>
> On Dec 28, 2021,
On Dec 28, 2021, at 5:53 AM, Rick Womer wrote:
> I don’t think I’ve seen a cluster of mushroom growing out of a tree trunk
> such as those in the first pic. Is the tree alive or dead?
I'm not sure whether the tree was still alive. Seeing mushrooms like that on a
trunk was a surprise to me as
Nice photos!
I don’t think I’ve seen a cluster of mushroom growing out of a tree trunk such
as those in the first pic. Is the tree alive or dead?
Rick
> On Dec 26, 2021, at 4:49 AM, David Mann wrote:
>
> I went running on some trails up the hill today and a couple of mushrooms
> caught my
Of course it is hard for me to tell from the other side of the world,
but in my European books it looks closest to Rhodotus palmatus (netted
Rhodotus or rosy veincap). Though rare in W-Europe a spike has been
seen of this mushroom due to the Dutch elm disease.
Henk
Op zo 26 dec. 2021 om 10:49
On Dec 26, 2021, at 11:09 PM, Ralf R Radermacher wrote:
>
> Am 26.12.21 um 10:49 schrieb David Mann:
>> I went running on some trails up the hill today and a couple of mushrooms
>> caught my eye. My daughter is really interested in mushrooms so I stopped
>> each time to take photos with my
I like both shots but have a slight preference for the fly agaric.. The
first one is fascinating though.. it looks like something we -should-
know..
aside to Ralf - I think Dave knows that - since he named it . The nice
thing about it's looks -it isn't likely to be confused with a anything
Am 26.12.21 um 10:49 schrieb David Mann:
I went running on some trails up the hill today and a couple of mushrooms
caught my eye. My daughter is really interested in mushrooms so I stopped each
time to take photos with my phone.
Great shots. But beware, the second one is extremely poisonous.
I went running on some trails up the hill today and a couple of mushrooms
caught my eye. My daughter is really interested in mushrooms so I stopped each
time to take photos with my phone.
I don't know what type this one is...
http://gallery.multi.net.nz/photo/1124/#peso
But I do know a fly
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