Until July 2017, documenting the seasons of coastal Dorset. I'm a complete amateur so don't trust I'm always right. If ever you see I'm wrong - whether with identifications or in anything else - do say! Meanwhile . . . I've now moved to Halifax in West Yorkshire. Click on the link below to collect the new URL. Don't forget to follow there!

Monday 20 February 2012

FUNGI IN FEBRUARY

I'm going back to February 4th (when the ground was frozen solid and the light was dim) because I don't want to miss showing you the fungi I saw in the woods -
This is the fungus we met first a couple of weeks ago in the post
'I'm a Tree Follower - What About You?'

by a river where there are a lot of fallen and felled trees. In these pictures, they are yew and sycamore.


I won't pretend to know anything about them, just put them here for you to see - though if anyone would like to suggest what they are - that WOULD be interesting!


It's forever striking me how interest shifts as one gets closer to things. It's almost as if they become something else completely.


A few years ago, I decided there was no reason why I shouldn't name fungi in my own way - devise new names. That way, I wouldn't run the risk of misleading anyone, of saying things are what they are not - and I named one after pasta shells. As part of the Blogger setup, you can see what words people have typed into a search engine to land up here, on Loose and Leafy. It's surprising how often people are looking for 'Fungi which look like pasta'! This one, I now name 'Mutton Pie'.

Though when you look at its underside . . .

Enlarged!

Part of the underside of 'Mutton Pie' fungus.


There were quite a few like this (about six inches across) on the logs in the picture above. I don't like them much - though they are interesting. The top-side texture is strange. (They were growing flush with the bark so I couldn't see their underneaths.) They seem to have dragons' scales growing through them.


I'm not sure if the green is an intrinsic part of the organism or a mould that sets in or ..  . what! (Remember the picture above is enlarged from about two square inches.)


Further along the track, growing from the remains of a tree which still has its roots in the ground was this.


These are quite big. I call them 'Uplighters'.


The Mutton Pies were growing on wood which was beginning to flake away. So was the one with dinosaur's scales. The Uplighters are on a tree that still has life in its roots, with what seem to be suckers growing out from them. The fungi below are growing on wood that has been left in place long enough after felling for moss to grow over the bark - but they are not flaking away and keep their shape.


This is what they look like close to.

I haven't got a name for them yet. Have you?

This is the elderberry tree I am following.
February 19th 2012.
When I set out to take the picture, there was sunshine.
No sooner had I shut the door behind me than
evening fell and the light failed.
Still - enough was left to see by!


Here's an update on other people who are 'following' trees.
Posts marked in bold are ones which have been published since

the last Loose and Leafy post on
February 11th 2012.

Patio Patch - Wych Elm - Ulmus glabra ‘Camperdownii’
Recent Posts

Arigna Gardener - Twisted Willow - Introduction 

Moongazy Girl - is also following a Horse Chestnut
- click HERE for her first tree-following post.
(And if you'd like to know why her Horse Chestnut is male -
you'll need to read her second post HERE!)

Gardening Ways - First Post in a Series about Gary's chosen tree
- a magnificent plane at Compton Verney in Warwickshire.

Tree Care Tips - Where 'Forest Keeper' is following
Horse Chestnut. (Aesculus hippocastanum)

Gill Heavens has posted an Introduction to the trees she
will be following this year at On the Edge Gardening.
- Lime (Tilia x europaea) and Copper Beech (Fagus sylvatica “Atropurpurea”).
Her second post is now up The Eyes Have It!

Hyde Daily Photo - The Tree Un-named - Two Posts . . .
(with the middle HERE!)

The Wilder Gardener is following an Ash in his garden
- he introduces it in a post called 'Hedging My Bets'.

Let me know if you would like your blog added to the list
- either by leaving a note in comments
Ditto, let me know whenever you post about ‘your tree’
and I'll put an updated link to it here.

Important!
If your tree is not here
- or you are not here and should be
- or if your latest post is not here
. . . let me know!

And
Remember - you can also keep in touch with other tree-bloggers by signing up with

POSTS WITH FUNGI 
And for more posts with fungi
- click the  toadstool

18 comments:

Anonymous said...

I like your idea of renaming the fungi that you find. They are all interesting in different ways aren't they?

Wildgardener said...

Thanks for adding me to the role of tree-follow honour. Great fungi pics, especially the pale green one.

Down by the sea said...

Hi Lucy,
Your photos of fungi are amazing. I will definitely be looking at fungi more closely in future! Your unnamed fungi remind me of mountain perches.

Thanks for adding me too to your tree followers, hope to post about my tree tomorrow.
Sarah

Lucy Corrander Now in Halifax! said...

Hello Toffeeapple. Fungi are such strange things they never seem quite to 'belong' - yet they are fundamental to so much . . . possibly everything!

Hello Wildgardener. Pleased to have you and your ash aboard!

. . . and you too, Sarah. Looking forward to reading your tree post.

Gerald (SK14) said...

mutton pie fungus - well they'll have gotten their original names in a similar manner with folk thinking what they reminded themselves of - I was looking at an old nearby oak recently with a broken branch and have now just discovered a 2009 photo I took with the branch intact - don't know when I'll blog about it yet though.

Lucy Corrander Now in Halifax! said...

Hi, Gerald. If you post a comparison of what the oak was like 'then' and what it's like now - do make sure I know and I'll put a link to it from here.

Mark and Gaz said...

Interesting post! Fungi is rarely featured on garden blogs yet is very much part of its balance. So many interesting ones out there, with even more interesting appearances!

Ginny said...

Love the fungi pictures - they are fascinating, aren't they?

Rowan said...

It's amazing how much fungus there is around once you start to look. The old post that you mentioned in your comment on my blog - it does look like Jew's Ear to me.

Forest Keeper said...

For the unnamed fungi, how about Turkey Tails?
I Love FUNGI! It is perhaps the most vital species on the planet.
Paul Stamets is a great and fascinating authority on fungi. He has a great book called "Mycelium Running". A recommended read for anyone who is fascinated by the way nature does what it does.
Thanks for a great post!

Monica the Garden Faerie said...

Fungi are the best! I've always loved them. I get some kind of cool fungi growths on two tree stumps in my backyard--I have no idea why I've never thought to photograph them, as I very much appreciate them IRL. Well, that's a project for this year, then.

Carole Barkett said...

Beautiful collection of fungi. So many types.

Yogi♪♪♪ said...

Wow, you have an eye for unusual. Nic post.

Caroline Gill said...

Lucy, what amazing posts! Thank you for your message on my blog, Wild and Wonderful. I'm actually living in a temp. flat surrounded by concrete at present, so no trees to hand in terms of 'watching' one. When we move (which we hope to do soon) I may get back in touch with regard to your follow-on project from TTY. Meanwhile, I'll add you to my blogroll. Thank you!

VaishVijay said...

Such passion for fungi!

Pearl said...

What a fantastic post -- and what a fantastic thing to come across in the dead of winter...

Greetings from Minneapolis,

Pearl

Linda said...

I really enjoyed this post with the fungi and following a tree Lucy. I visited a few days ago, but as you know I have a hard time with the captcha. Thanks for stopping by my blog and giving me feedback. I'm always looking for ways to make my blog more user friendly.

Rambling Woods said...

I live on a pond with wetland woods and I see lot of fungus and lichen.. Identifying them is a whole new ballgame..wish I had thought of giving them my own names...Michelle