View allAll Photos Tagged Bracket
This grows on Cherry as well as Birch.
Staffordshire Fungus Group Foray Barlaston and Rough Close Common Staffordshire UK
24th September 2023
When filling out your NCAA brackets go ahead and put the #1 seed in the West, Michigan State, in the title game. :)
A bracket fungus colonizes a fallen branch of the American Beech lying on the ground at Warren Woods State Park, a beech-maple forest in Chikaming Township, Berrien County, Michigan.
I found this beautiful Bracket Polypore, a type of Fungi or Mushroom. This one property always over waters their lawn.
Union Street Music Festival, San Francisco, California
Psalm 63:5
I will be fully satisfied as with the richest of foods; with singing lips my mouth will praise you.
This might be Oak bracket / Pseudoinonotus dryadeus or another species that exudes water. Growing on felled hardwood
Near Coy pond in Bournemouth Upper Gardens
Bracket fungi, or shelf fungi, are among the many groups of fungi that comprise the phylum Basidiomycota. Characteristically, they produce shelf- or bracket-shaped fruiting bodies called conks that lie in a close planar grouping of separate or interconnected horizontal rows. Brackets can range from only a single row of a few caps, to dozens of rows of caps that can weigh several hundred pounds. They are mainly found on trees (living and dead) and coarse woody debris, and may resemble mushrooms. Some form annual fruiting bodies while others are perennial and grow larger year after year. Bracket fungi are typically tough and sturdy and produce their spores, called basidiospores, within the pores that typically make up the undersurface.
Could be Peniophora ochroleuca, if so it's rare, taken at Froggatt Edge in the Peak District and I'm waiting for a day with good weather so I can get a shot of the pores on the underside.
Focus stack of nine images through Helicon Focus and using the cameras' focus bracketing.
Framed by the guardrail uprights at Ski Slide Road Bridge, CP SD70ACu #7048 cools it's wheels while waiting for an eastbound. The train is so large it doesn't even fit in the 11,425' siding.
6-scale version of the 1x2-1x4 bracket (Bricklink part 2436), shown with two tiles and a grille tile on the front.
I was planning to build a 6-scale vehicle, but have shelved that idea ... so these parts are going to be recycled back into my collection.
I had to bracket 3 images to get this and then merge in LR. I think my D800 would have got this in one. I've left it in full resolution if anyone wants to take a closer look. I might have another go at editing this in the morning after I've warmed up a bit!!
We walked Ruby down to the woods via Sicklehatch Lane and so just four images of leaves berries fungi and a landscape.
This fungus is growing happily on the side of a tree stump, inches from a stone wall, where it enjoys shade, moisture, and privacy. I found it anyway.
This pleasing yet unidentified bracket fungi was shot whilst on board m y mobility scooter. Shooting for a shallow depth of field
My ID widget points to this being a "Daedaleopsis Confragosa" commonly known as the thin walled maze polypore or the blushing bracket. I've been walking past this fallen tree for a couple of years and I've noticed it's been a good host. Less helpful was my Speedlite, or rather the AA batteries, which died only minutes before I could use it here. A schoolboy error on my part and hence the telephone number for an ISO. A bit of adjustment in Affinity Photo and an 11:8 crop hopefully makes amends...
Martinhole Wood, Langdon Hills, Essex UK.