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Wikipaedia: Hair ice forms on moist, rotting wood from broadleaf trees when temperatures are slightly under 0 °C (32 °F) and the air is humid. The hairs appear to root at the mouth of wood rays (never on the bark), and their thickness is similar to the diameter of the wood ray channels. A piece of wood that produces hair ice once may continue to produce it over several years.

Hair ice found on a fallen Red Alder branch, created by the decomposition fungus Exidiopsis effusa, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State, USA

Hair ice found on a fallen Red Alder branch, created by the decomposition fungus Exidiopsis effusa, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State, USA

Hair ice found on a fallen Red Alder branch, created by the decomposition fungus Exidiopsis effusa, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State, USA

Hair ice found on a fallen Red Alder branch, created by the decomposition fungus Exidiopsis effusa, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State, USA

Hair ice found on a fallen Red Alder branch, created by the decomposition fungus Exidiopsis effusa, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State, USA

Hair ice found on a fallen Red Alder branch, created by the decomposition fungus Exidiopsis effusa, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State, USA

Hair ice found on a fallen Red Alder branch, created by the decomposition fungus Exidiopsis effusa, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State, USA

Bougie Winterfell by Frostbeard studio

Hair ice found on a fallen Red Alder branch, created by the decomposition fungus Exidiopsis effusa, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State, USA

Hair ice found on a fallen Red Alder branch, created by the decomposition fungus Exidiopsis effusa, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State, USA

Hair ice found on a fallen Red Alder branch, created by the decomposition fungus Exidiopsis effusa, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State, USA

Hair ice found on a fallen Red Alder branch, created by the decomposition fungus Exidiopsis effusa, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State, USA

Hair ice found on a fallen Red Alder branch, created by the decomposition fungus Exidiopsis effusa, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State, USA

Hair ice found on a fallen Red Alder branch, created by the decomposition fungus Exidiopsis effusa, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State, USA

Hair ice found on a fallen Red Alder branch, created by the decomposition fungus Exidiopsis effusa, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State, USA

Hair ice found on a fallen Red Alder branch, created by the decomposition fungus Exidiopsis effusa, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State, USA

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