Thanks Igor.
I haven't yet seen the armillaria (honey fungus) this season. Last year
I saw these in October - they are also nice photo subjects.
Henk
Op 2020-09-17 om 19:26 schreef Igor PDML-StR:
That's a very attractive photo, especially at a higher(tighter) zoom
level, where you can see every detail, as a few people have pointed
out already.
The glow is a nice touch!
Despite being avid mushroom gatherers (and eaters), we've never gathered
any of this type. Of all the mushrooms growing on trees and stumps, we
only gathered Armillaria - which we liked a lot! Those are tasty and
easy to handle, as they are almost never damaged by larva ("worms").
(Fun fact: in Russian, sulphur shelf/sulphur polypore mushrooms are
called "trutoviki", which shares the word root with "truten'" - drone
bee; this root means "parasite". These mushrooms are sometimes
regarded as "sanitarians of forests" that help keeping the forests
healthy, but seen as "pests" in personal gardens, as they ensure a
quick death of your favorite fruit tree.)
Igor
ann sanfedele Thu, 17 Sep 2020 03:45:42 -0700 wrote:
That is such a lovely photo.. I've eaten them and they are delicious -
one of the few I felt confident enough to gather. I bet it was not
long before those were cut down... commonly called sulphur shelf here.
ann
On 9/17/2020 3:25 AM, Henk Terhell wrote:
Autumn is still very sunny here in western Europe so mushrooms are
only slowly popping up.
Here a more resilient type, sulphur polypore on a dead tree.
You can eat these but I rather stick to carrots.
https://flic.kr/p/2jGPDWM
Henk
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