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Here lye the bodies of Thomas Vyncent, Gentleman, and Jane his wife, by whom he has Issue 8 sons & 7 daughters. He departed this life ye 29th of March 1606. She ye 7th of Januarie 1601

Mourn those who are gathered to grieve these remains

At the chosen occasion of the reader they will be sorrowful.

Uplifted by the beloved, reclining with kindred spouse

While forefathers will have passed away with wings

To embrace both the living and the dead

They lived and lie dead entrusting in the Lord God.

For what reason is human death agonized?

Death is to be reflected upon

Not to be feared by you, But to be feared by evil

The distraught successor to the deceased with the love of his parents, turns this poor being, thus, into the earth

Thomas Vincent .................. "

 

Cornish slate tomb of Thomas Vincent 1606 , landowner, farmer and attorney at law. wife Jane Oampens 1601 and family . They lived at Battens farm in North Hill

Some the children have skulls above to show they predeceased their parents.

Above them is the figure of Death with scythe and dart, shown apparently triumphant but higher still on the pediment, Christ is shown trampling on Death and Satan, giving the hope of Resurrection.

In front are carved the arms of Lampen (left) - argent, on a bend engrailed sable, three ram’s heads cabossed of the field attired or Vincent# (centre) – azure, three quatrefoils argent &

Lower (right) – sable, a chevron between three roses argent

 

He m Jane Lower widow of John Lampen

Children

1. Thomas dsp 1612

2. John bc1591-1646 m Sarah .......

3. Nathaniel

4. Henry

5. Methusalem died between 1603 - 1606

6. Richard

7. William

8. George

1. Katherine

2. Lydia

3. Frances

4. Mary

5. Rebecca

7. Jane

 

In his Will of 1603 Thomas states

" Seinge the uncertentye of life, and that nothinge is more sure then death And nothinge more uncertayne then the hower of death , to the ende everie man should be there unto prepared as by experience everie daie, And not longe since in that it pleased Almightie God (to my greate discomfort) to call unto himselfe, out of this myserable and wreched world my deare aand loving wife, with whome I lyved many yeares in peace and love, and had (god bethanked) plentifull fruite of the married life, besides many other blessings of wealth and living. And therefore doe desire nowe Almightie God to graunt me his grace so to Dispise sonne and all worldy vanity that I maie saie with the blessed Appostle Saint Paule, The world is

crucified to me, and I to the world, Christe is to me life, and to Dye is my gaine and advantage. I desire nowe to be loosed, and to be with Christ. Wherefore beinge in good health and of perfect remembraunce (God be thanked) Doe make my will and Testament declaring thereby myne intent and meaninge

of the Disposinge of such wealth and lyvinge , as my good

God of his bounteous liberalitie hath bestowed upon me..........

 

(His lands went to his eldest son Thomas, with money for the rest when they reached the age of 21 or on their marriage

Son Thomas appears to have had no family, and on his death in 1612 , his deathbed spoken will states:

" on the xxixth (29th) day of June in the six and fortieth year of the reign of our Sovereign Lord King James and in the year of our Son [of] God 1612. Thomas Vincent of Northill in the County of Cornwall, Gentleman, being sick and wounded but of perfect mind and memory do make and declare his last will and testament nuncupative in manner and form following, viz: First he committed his soul to Almighty God his maker and redeemer. Then he gave and bequeathed to Catherine his eldest sister the sum of fifty pounds. Item he willed left and bequeathed all things which he had whatsoever to John Vincent his brother in the same manner as his father left them unto him. And he also made [the] [a]foresaid John Vincent his sole heir and executor and willed that he should see the legacies performed in the presence. of John Vincent the elder, Catherine Vincent, William Vincent and others".

 

The estate then passed to his brother John.

The manor of Trewithe / Trewithy belonged to the Vincents, whose heiress brought it to the Darleys in 17c

 

opc-cornwall.org/Par_new/n_p/pdfs/north_hill_will_vincent...

Picture with thanks - uploaded by Tim 30 October 2016 britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/101249982-church-of-st-torne...

un calisson bleu comme un lapis-lazuli au bon goût fruité.

 

Coffee with a blue calisson from Arles in France (a fruit and almond flavoured sweet, normally they are white).

NEZ

Riche, le caramel doux et crémeux se combine avec des notes fraîches et fruitées sur le nez.

 

EN BOUCHE

Rond, la vanille est associée aux douces notes boisées du chêne. Le caractère fruité se développe avec le temps.

 

FINALE

Douce et persistante.

le vin et le ballon.... un ballon de blanc ....

 

You could feel, smell, taste the sun in the fruits... taken near Daley

I don't know if he's one of my forebears but if we are related I'm pleased to say I have not inherited his thirst for Irish blood. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Denny_%28soldier%29

 

humphrysfamilytree.com/Denny/sir.edward.governor.html

 

Inscription on the Denny Tomb at Waltham Abbey

  

An epitaph upon ye death of ye Right Worthie Sir Edward Denny sonn of ye Rt Hon Sr Anthony Denny, Counsellor of Estate and Executor to King Henry VIII and of Joan Champion his wife, who beinge of Queen Elizabeth’s private Chamber and one of ye Counsell of Munster in Ireland was governor of Kerry and Desmonde, and Colonell of certain Irishe Forces there; Departed this life about ye 523 yere of his age ye XIIthe of February 1599. He is offered to ye view and consideration of ye Discrete reader a spectacle of pietie and Pittie, the Pittie kindly proceeding from a vertuous Ladie, daughter of Pierce Edgecombe of Mounte Edgecombe, Esquier, and sumtime Maid of Honour to Queen Elizabeth, hath out of meane fortune but no meane affection produced this monument dedicate to the remembrance of her deare husband.

The pitie must inwardly be conveyed and considered in ye person of ye dead carkeys here interred cut off like a pleasunt fruite before perfect ripeness. This weorthie knight here represented, religious, wise, just, liberal, right valiant, most active, Learning’s friend, Pride’s foe, kindly, loving mutch beloved, was honoured with ye dignitie of knighthood by due deserte in ye field, in which Bedd of Honor hee willingly would have ended his dayes, but it pleased his most Merciful Redeemer to bringe him to his grave in Christian Peace, yet so farr condescended to his honourable desire yt in his countree’s service he tooke his deadlie sickness. If ye times [most happily flourishing under gratious Astraea] had been answerable to his heroicall designes without all doubt hee could not have had [according to ye strange Italian proverb] “ his beake greater than his wings.” I finally refer inquisitive searchers into men’s fame to ye true Report even of he most malitious; and recommend ye gallant pattern of his life, together with his repentant Patience and assured faith at ye point of Death to his owne and all posterytie.

  

El Día de Muertos es una celebración mexicana de origen prehispánico que honra a los difuntos el 2 de noviembre, comienza el 1 de noviembre, y coincide con las celebraciones católicas de Día de los Fieles Difuntos y Todos los Santos.

 

La Ofrenda y la visita de las almas. Se cree que las almas de los niños regresan de visita el día primero de noviembre, y las almas de los adultos regresan el día 2. En el caso de que no se pueda visitar la tumba, ya sea por que ya no existe la tumba del difunto, o porque la familia está muy lejos para ir a visitarla, también se elaboran detallados altares en las casas, donde se ponen las ofrendas, que pueden ser platillos de comida, el pan de muerto, vasos de agua, mezcal, tequila, pulque o atole, cigarros e incluso juguetes para las almas de los niños. Todo esto se coloca junto a retratos de los difuntos rodeados de veladoras.

Chapeau mon spécimen jusqu’au 8cm.convexe étalé puis presque en entonnoir couvert de écailles brun , jaune foncé marge irrégulier.

Hymenophore décurrentes fourchue interveinées.

Odeur fruitée.

Croissance forêt mixte dominante conifère épinettes.

Waltham Abbey, Essex

 

Sir Edward Denny was actually interred in the family mausoleum, which stood on the other side of the east wall of the south aisle of the church. His wife, Lady Margaret, daughter of Pierce Edgecombe, Lord Mountedgecombe, outlived her husband by forty-eight years and was buried at Bishop s Stortford during the Civil War. Because she had been a Lady-in-Waiting to Queen Elizabeth 1, Queen Anne of Denmark and Queen Henrietta Maria, it was not thought safe to bring her body across strongly Parliamentarian territory for interment at Waltham, and also, because her eldest son had been killed fighting in Ireland and she had supported his widow and children, there was probably insufficient money available to do so.

 

Sir Edward Denny was the younger son of Sir Anthony Denny, Lord of the Manor of Waltham, who had leased the site of the Abbey from the Crown after the Dissolution in 1540. Sir Edward was born circa 1547 and died in 1599 (1600 by modern reckoning the New Year began on March 25th before 1752). He spent the greater part of his adult life as a soldier fighting for Queen Elizabeth 1 in Ireland, where he was castellan of Tralee Castle, but he also sailed with Sir Humphrey Gilbert in 1583 to claim Newfoundland for England, and served in the Channel fleet against the Spanish Armada in 1588, on both occasions leaving his wife in command at Tralee. They had ten children - seven boys and three girls, and they may be seen praying for the souls of their parents, below the effigies. The boy and girl with linked arms were twins, the boys with swords were of age when their father died, and the girls with ruffs were married.

 

The coats of arms at the top of the monument are: on your left, Denny impaling Mountedgecombe (the Edgecombe arms are reversed for some unknown reason): in the centre, 1st and 4th Denny, 2nd More (not the same family as Sir Thomas More, who also had Waltham connections), 3rd Troutbeck: on your right, Denny.

 

The figures of Youth and Age appear on either side of the arch above the effigies - Youth is blowing bubbles. Under the arch is a painted grapevine, representing Christ, the True Vine. Under the canopy are moon, stars and clouds. Roses are set on three sides of the inscription. They may have been meant for Tudor roses, but are actually Lancastrian. The inscription is difficult to read, so it is set out overleaf. Various marbles have been used in the tomb, but the figures are carved in Tottenhoe stone

from Buckinghamshire.

 

The monument was designed and made by lsaac James and Bartholomew Adye, who were London craftsmen, and made several similar tombs in London and the Home Counties. It was restored in 1965 by Miss l. Norholt, and again by Nimbus in 1990, when it was found that it had been built over the remains of a 14thC, piscina (a basin with drain in which the Communion vessels were washed after Mass).

 

The inscription reads:

 

“An epitaph upon ye death of ye right worthie Sir Edward Denny, Sonn of ye Right Honourable Sr Anthony Denny, Counseller of Estate and Executor to King Henry ye 8, and of Joan Champnon his wife; who belnge of Queen Elizabeth’s Private chamber and one of ye Counsell of Munster in Ireland, was Governor of Kerry and Desmonde, and Collonell of certain Irishe Forces there; Depted this life about ye 52 yere of his age, ye xiith of Feb. 1599. He is offred to ye view and consideration of ye Discreete reader a spectacle of Pietie and Pittie, the Pittie kindly proceeding from a vertuous Ladie, daughter of Pierce Edgecombe of Mounts Edgecombe, Esquier, and sumtime Maid of Honor to Queene Elizabeth, hath out of meane fortune but no means affection produced this Monument dedicate to the remembrance of her deare husband. The Pietie must inwardly be concevyed and considered in ye person of ye dead carkeys here interred cut off like a pleasunt fruite before perfect ripeness. This weorthey Knight here represented, religious, wise, just, liberal, right valiant, most active,Learning‘s friend, Pride’s foe, kindly, loving, mutch beloved, was honored with ye dignitie of Knighthood by due deserts in ye Field, in which Bedd of Honor hee willingly would have ended his dayes, but it pleased his most Merciful Redeemer to bringe him to his Grave in Christian Peace, yet so farr condescended to his honourable desire yt in his Countree's service he tooke his deadlie sickness. If ye times (more happily flourishing under gratious Astraea) had been answerable to his heroicall designes without all doubt hee could not have had (according to ye strange Italian proverb) "his beake greater than his wings" •

 

I finally refer inquisitive searchers into men's fame to ye true Report even of he most malitious; and recommende ye gallant pattern of his life, together with his repentant Patience and assured Faith at ye Point of Death to his owne and to all Posterytie.

Orange fun

 

2015 07 22 155456 Brotherton Park with Eleanor1 HDR

Fresh blackberries and blueberries with non-fat greek yogurt.

I love strawberries. It's the cuties fruite ever :-) It tastes good, looks cute and it's even amazing to shoot.

 

HBW dear flickrets !

Photographiés le 23 mai 2017 dans une forêt mixte dominée par les feuillus bordant le chemin de La Ferme, à La Ferme, en Abitibi-Témiscamingue.

 

Espèce : Postia undosa / Polypore ondulé

pat230517-03

Date : 23 mai 2017

Lieu : forêt mixte, sanctuaire Marial, La Ferme, Abitibi-Témiscamingue

Habitat/substrat : bûche de conifère (sapin)

Descr. espèce photo. : grégaire, parfois imbriqué, 0,8-3,6 cm large, 0,5-2,6 cm profond, 0,5-0,8 cm épais face stérile bosselée; pores anguleux, longs (jusqu’à 1 cm), face poroïde blanchâtre à carnée; odeur agréable, fruitée, saveur indistincte.

YL4199

 

Note:

Cet article est destiné à paraître dans les «Carnets mycologiques» du bulletin du Cercle des mycologues de Montréal.

 

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MÉTADONNÉES

 

YL4199 (fongarium personnel).

Sainte-Julienne (Lanaudière), 5 septembre 2011.

Habitat: dans une chênaie rouge mêlée de hêtres, de pins blancs, d’érables à sucre, d’ostryers, etc., sur sol calcaire, près d’un petit ruisseau asséché.

Une douzaine de jeunes basidiomes présents, les uns poussant en arc, les autres suivant le ruisseau. Parfois fasciculés.

Trouvé par Louise Rocheleau.

 

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RÉSUMÉ

 

Ramaria violascens est une grande espèce blanche dont les extrémités des rameaux tournent au pourpre-violet pendant la croissance, avant de redevenir concolores à maturité. Les spores striées rangent cette ramaire dans le sous-genre Ramaria, dont les espèces connues jusqu’ici ont des ramifications aux pointes plus foncées dès le tout jeune âge. R. violascens constitue donc une exception parmi les espèces de ce sous-genre.

 

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En ce jour de septembre 2011, les ramaires abondaient dans notre forêt préférée de Sainte-Julienne. Des violettes, des jaunes, des orangées, des rosées... Mais l’une d’entre elles a particulièrement attiré l’attention de ma Douce: elle était d’un blanc pur comme de la craie.

 

Cette très jolie ramaire était présente en grand nombre; j’ai donc décidé d’en faire une collection. Cependant, je n’ai pas essayé d’identifier cette espèce le jour même de la récolte, car d’autres entités rares m’accaparaient à ce moment.

 

Voilà que quatre jours plus tard, je suis retourné sur le site. J’en ai profité pour visiter la station de la ramaire blanche. Les basidiomes s’étaient quelque peu développés. J’ai cru bon d’en faire une deuxième collection. C’est là que cette espèce a commencé à m’intriguer particulièrement...

 

Un examen de quelques basidiomes m’a fait réaliser que les pointes de cette ramaire, en se développant, prenaient une coloration pourpre-violet, pour ensuite disparaître: phénomène inusité!

 

Malgré l’examen des spores et des autres caractères microscopiques, aucun des ouvrages consultés ne m’a permis de mettre un nom sur cette espèce. Tout ce que je pouvais affirmer, à cause de ses spores striées sur la longueur, c’est qu’elle appartenait au sous-genre Ramaria (qu’on peut aussi nommer “groupe Botrytis”).

 

Le sous-genre Ramaria compte habituellement des espèces colorées: jaunâtres, rosâtres, rougeâtres ou saumonées, rarement blanchâtres, dont l’extrémité des rameaux est toujours distinctement plus foncée, et ce, dès le tout jeune âge.

 

Les ramaires qui n’appartiennent pas au sous-genre Ramaria ont des spores plus ou moins verruqueuses, mais jamais striées. Certaines de ces espèces sont vivement colorées (il en existe de toutes les couleurs ou presque), mais leurs pointes apicales ne sont pas de couleur distinctement plus foncée que les rameaux, quoiqu’elles ne soient pas toujours parfaitement concolores. On peut citer en exemple les espèces saumonées aux pointes jaunâtres du complexe R. formosa.

 

Étant dans un cul-de-sac quant à ma tentative d’identifier cette espèce, j’ai décidé de consulter André Paul, mycologue du club de Montréal, l’unique Québécois qui semble étudier systématiquement le genre Ramaria depuis quelques années. En lui envoyant les photos de cette ramaire blanche, accompagnées des notes prises sur ma collection, j’espérais qu’il pourrait résoudre l’énigme.

 

Malheureusement, André n’a pas eu plus de chance que moi. Impossible pour lui d’identifier cette espèce immaculée. Il m’a toutefois précisé que le groupe Botrytis comprenait parfois des formes albinos. Mais cela ne semblait pas être le cas ici, les pointes se colorant nettement de pourpre-violet avec l’âge.

 

Une dernière hypothèse m’est apparue: peut-être que le changement de couleur tardif de l’extrémité des ramifications n’était qu’un caractère anormal dû aux conditions climatiques. La patience est une grande qualité pour un mycologue: je me suis résigné à attendre une autre année avant de lui apposer un nom provisoire, dans l’espoir de trouver un jour des spécimens plus “éloquents”. Évidemment, la constance de l’apparition de cette coloration pourpre-violet, quoique éphémère, était LE caractère à surveiller.

 

L’année 2012 fut trop sèche pour ma ramaire mystère: elle ne s’est pas montrée de tout l’été.

 

Ma patience a été récompensée cet été: le mois d’août très pluvieux a provoqué une belle poussée de l’espèce, exactement au même endroit et pratiquement à la même époque qu’en 2011. Même que cette nouvelle fructification a produit de plus gros et de plus nombreux basidiomes. J’ai donc pu observer à nouveau les caractères de cette ramaire et en évaluer la variabilité. Je sais maintenant que les spécimens de 2011 n’étaient pas anormaux: j’ai retrouvé les mêmes caractères à deux ans d’intervalle.

 

Tout comme en 2011, les jeunes champignons de 2013 sont parfaitement blancs; les pointes des rameaux tournent au pourpre-violet chez les spécimens à mi-développement, et cette belle couleur disparaît à maturité. Finalement, les basidiomes tournent uniformément au crème brunâtre pâle à maturité. Des taches ocrées apparaissent par endroits sur les rameaux à cause de la présence de la sporée.

 

Par ailleurs, si les basidiomes sont exposés au vent ou directement au soleil, les extrémités des rameaux deviendront brun foncé avec l’âge. Mais il n’y a aucun lien entre ce brunissement et la belle couleur pourpre-violet observée par moments. Pratiquement toutes les clavaires, et non seulement les ramaires, peuvent présenter ce brunissement des extrémités. On n’a qu’à penser à la jolie et commune Clavaire fusiforme (Clavulinopsis fusiformis): il n’est pas rare de la voir avec les pointes collapsées et brun foncé, alors que le reste du champignon demeure orange vif.

 

Maintenant que je connais mieux cette ramaire, je me permets de vous la présenter en lui attribuant un nom provisoire.

 

La photo ci-dessus illustre de jeunes basidiomes alors qu’ils sont blanc de craie. Certains y verront peut-être une vague teinte rosée.

 

Voyez un basidiome alors que la zone apicale des rameaux tourne au pourpre-violet:

 

www.flickr.com/photos/27441280@N06/9721128342/

 

Vous pouvez également observer un basidiome en coupe, montrant la chair marbrée, à cette adresse:

 

www.flickr.com/photos/27441280@N06/9721128272/

 

Finalement, voici ce à quoi ressemble un spécimen mature:

 

www.flickr.com/photos/27441280@N06/9721128388/

 

DESCRIPTION BASÉE SUR LES COLLECTIONS NOS 4199, 4206 ET 4261, AINSI QUE DE NOMBREUX BASIDIOMES VUS SUR LE TERRAIN

 

MACROSCOPIE

 

- Basidiome atteignant environ 20 cm de hauteur et 15 cm (-25 cm) de largeur. À l’occasion, les “basidiomes” les plus larges sont d’étroites “fructifications” fusionnées à la base ou poussant en fascicules. Dans ce cas, sur le terrain, on a l’impression de rencontrer une seule ramaire très large, mais il s’agit en réalité d’une grappe d’exemplaires étroits et accolés les uns aux autres.

- Pied épais, massif chez les jeunes, de 2-3 (-4) cm de largeur, subradicant, blanc de craie, s’amincissant avec l’âge tout en devenant de plus en plus radicant, parfois fusionné.

- Rameaux se divisant de 2 à 7 fois, de couleur blanche, crème ou rosâtre à maturité. Ramifications en U (arrondies).

- Pointes concolores aux rameaux dans le jeune âge, prenant une coloration pourpre-violet à mi-développement, et redevenant concolores à maturité.

- Chair blanc de craie dans les rameaux, marbrée de zones hyalines et blanches à blanc rosé dans le pied.

- Odeur très faible, fruitée ou anisée, ou moins agréable, de “verdure”, à maturité nettement subterreuse ou de gousse de pois.

- Saveur douce, parfois un peu âcre après un certain temps.

- Sporée ocre orangé (F-G).

- Des taches jaunâtres apparaissent par endroits dès que la sporulation débute.

 

MACROCHIMIE

 

- Sulfate ferreux: bleu-violet sur les rameaux.

- KOH 10 %: vite jaune sur la chair du pied.

- Melzer: nul, puis violet sur la chair du pied, après 5-10 minutes.

 

MICROSCOPIE

 

Spores allongées, rétrécies aux extrémités, striées sur la longueur, ± en oblique, 11-14 x 4-5,5 µm, en moyenne 12,5 x 5 µm.

Q= 2,2-3,1. Qe= 2,5.

Basides bouclées, 4-sp., atteignant 25 x 9 µm.

 

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En conclusion, cette espèce semble vraiment unique en son genre, L’entité américaine la plus proche semble être Ramaria rubrievanescens. Celle-ci diffère de R. violascens par son pied très massif et par ses rameaux aux extrémités vineuses qui se décolorent avec l’âge. R. rubrievanescens pousse dans les forêts de conifères de la côte ouest de l’Amérique; sa présence est mentionnée en Nouvelle-Écosse dans le même habitat.

 

OUVRAGES CONSULTÉS

 

BREITENBACH, J. & F. KRÄNZLIN, 1986. «Champignons de Suisse. Tome 2. Champignons sans lames (Hétérobasidiomycètes, Aphyllophorales, Gastéromycètes)». Mykologia, Lucerne, 412 p.

 

COKER, W. C., 1974 (2e éd.). «The club and coral mushrooms (Clavarias) of the United States and Canada.» Dover, New York, 209 p.

 

EXETER, R. L., L. NORVELL & E. CAZARES, 2006. «Ramaria of the Pacific Northwestern United States.» U. S. Department of interior bureau of land management, Salem district, Salem, 157 p.

 

PETERSEN, R. H., 1986. «Some Ramaria taxa from Nova Scotia.» Amer. J. Bot., 61: 1786-1811.

 

RAILLÈRE, M. & M. GANNAZ, 1999. «Les Ramaria européennes.» Féd. Myc. Dauphiné-Savoie, 176 p.

 

Révisé par Louise Rocheleau.

 

YL

 

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Mise à jour:

 

L'espèce européenne la plus proche de Ramaria violascens semble être R. pallida (Schaeff.) Ricken. Il s'agit d'une espèce non bouclée. Comme la présence ou l'absence de boucles est un caractère fondamental dans l'étude des Ramaria, il semble préférable de conserver le nom R. violascens pour l'entité américaine, à basides bouclées.

On peut trouver une photo et une description de Ramaria pallida dans le Tome 2 de Champignons de Suisse.

 

YL, 23 septembre 2013.

This is a picture inside Mana Grocery, a store close to me and possibly the best grocery store in Asmara. On the left in the middle you can see some potatoes, below that are some zuccini, just to the right in the crate on the floor are some chilies, then some bottled water on top, moving up fromthere are some more chilies, then some eggplants, and then garlic. to the right of the eggplants are carrots, then spinach, then lettice. Between the lettice and the woman on the shelf you can see some pasta. behind the middle of the ladder you can see some Nutella, above the ladder is some mayonaise, to the right and down from the mayo are some yellow boxes of Lipton tea (the bad kind of tea here), on top of the shelves are stacks of toilet paper, and then to the right of the toilet paper on the far wall on top of the selves are some yellow cans of Nido (powdered milk). The shelf below the Nido is full of liquor, ranging from gin, vodka, whiskey, rum, irish cream, wine etc. In the foreground on the right you can see a pile of oranges (there is more fruite to my left but not in the picture), to the right of the oranges is a freezer with, chicken (sometimes) and other frozen goods (there is a refrigerator to my right but out of the shot). Behind the oranges is a stack of bottled water (larger cans of water sit outside) with sliced bread ontop (not a traditional bread here, but the grocery store is in a part of town with a lot of foreigners). Also you can just see some banans behind the bread and then a skinny grey/silver thing sticking up which is the scale. And that's my grocery store.

BelgiBeer - BBD11

 

The Belgian Beer Discover 11

Brasserie : La Brasserie a Vapeur

Biere produite par la Brasserie a Vapeur.

Bierres :

* Vapeur Cochonne : 8,5% Belgian Strong Ale

Dark, intense amber.

Fruity, delicate.

Strong, fresh, seasoned.

Biere tres ambree, forte, nez fruite et delicat, douce et ronde au palais ; faiblement houblonnee mais correctement epicee (chicoree torrefiee, coriandre, ecorce d'orange douce).

 

* Saison De Pipaix : 6% Saison

Blond-amber, hazy.

Spicy, herbal, citric.

Very spicy, sour, fresh.

Biere traditionnelle nee avec la brasserie en 1785.

Biere tres seche, normalement houblonnee, legerement acide, tres epicee (poivre, gingembre, ecorce d'orange douce, curacao, badiane.)

 

* Vapeur En Folie : 8% Belgian Strong Blonde

Cloudy blond.

Fresh, slightly spiced.

Spiced sweetness, neutral.

Biere blonde forte et ronde moyennement houblonnee et epicee (cumin et ecorce d'orange douce).

 

* Vapeur Potiblonde : 8% Fruit beer (Pumpkin)

Hazy light orange with a dense foam.

Orange peel and spices.

Fruity taste, lightly spicy with medium carbonation.

 

( BelgiBeer vous devoile le veritable patrimoine belge, reconnu mondialement pour la qualite et la variete de ses produits, mais pourtant largement meconnu du grand public !

 

BelgiBeer, des Box bieres 100% artisanales !

 

Dans nos box bieres, nous mettons pour vous chaque mois le meilleur des petites et moyennes brasseries belges, que nous allons chercher directement chez elles. Chaque mois, BelgiBeer vous fait decouvrir une brasserie artisanale differente. )

Waltham Abbey, Essex

 

Sir Edward Denny was actually interred in the family mausoleum, which stood on the other side of the east wall of the south aisle of the church. His wife, Lady Margaret, daughter of Pierce Edgecombe, Lord Mountedgecombe, outlived her husband by forty-eight years and was buried at Bishop s Stortford during the Civil War. Because she had been a Lady-in-Waiting to Queen Elizabeth 1, Queen Anne of Denmark and Queen Henrietta Maria, it was not thought safe to bring her body across strongly Parliamentarian territory for interment at Waltham, and also, because her eldest son had been killed fighting in Ireland and she had supported his widow and children, there was probably insufficient money available to do so.

 

Sir Edward Denny was the younger son of Sir Anthony Denny, Lord of the Manor of Waltham, who had leased the site of the Abbey from the Crown after the Dissolution in 1540. Sir Edward was born circa 1547 and died in 1599 (1600 by modern reckoning the New Year began on March 25th before 1752). He spent the greater part of his adult life as a soldier fighting for Queen Elizabeth 1 in Ireland, where he was castellan of Tralee Castle, but he also sailed with Sir Humphrey Gilbert in 1583 to claim Newfoundland for England, and served in the Channel fleet against the Spanish Armada in 1588, on both occasions leaving his wife in command at Tralee. They had ten children - seven boys and three girls, and they may be seen praying for the souls of their parents, below the effigies. The boy and girl with linked arms were twins, the boys with swords were of age when their father died, and the girls with ruffs were married.

 

The coats of arms at the top of the monument are: on your left, Denny impaling Mountedgecombe (the Edgecombe arms are reversed for some unknown reason): in the centre, 1st and 4th Denny, 2nd More (not the same family as Sir Thomas More, who also had Waltham connections), 3rd Troutbeck: on your right, Denny.

 

The figures of Youth and Age appear on either side of the arch above the effigies - Youth is blowing bubbles. Under the arch is a painted grapevine, representing Christ, the True Vine. Under the canopy are moon, stars and clouds. Roses are set on three sides of the inscription. They may have been meant for Tudor roses, but are actually Lancastrian. The inscription is difficult to read, so it is set out overleaf. Various marbles have been used in the tomb, but the figures are carved in Tottenhoe stone

from Buckinghamshire.

 

The monument was designed and made by lsaac James and Bartholomew Adye, who were London craftsmen, and made several similar tombs in London and the Home Counties. It was restored in 1965 by Miss l. Norholt, and again by Nimbus in 1990, when it was found that it had been built over the remains of a 14thC, piscina (a basin with drain in which the Communion vessels were washed after Mass).

 

The inscription reads:

 

“An epitaph upon ye death of ye right worthie Sir Edward Denny, Sonn of ye Right Honourable Sr Anthony Denny, Counseller of Estate and Executor to King Henry ye 8, and of Joan Champnon his wife; who belnge of Queen Elizabeth’s Private chamber and one of ye Counsell of Munster in Ireland, was Governor of Kerry and Desmonde, and Collonell of certain Irishe Forces there; Depted this life about ye 52 yere of his age, ye xiith of Feb. 1599. He is offred to ye view and consideration of ye Discreete reader a spectacle of Pietie and Pittie, the Pittie kindly proceeding from a vertuous Ladie, daughter of Pierce Edgecombe of Mounts Edgecombe, Esquier, and sumtime Maid of Honor to Queene Elizabeth, hath out of meane fortune but no means affection produced this Monument dedicate to the remembrance of her deare husband. The Pietie must inwardly be concevyed and considered in ye person of ye dead carkeys here interred cut off like a pleasunt fruite before perfect ripeness. This weorthey Knight here represented, religious, wise, just, liberal, right valiant, most active,Learning‘s friend, Pride’s foe, kindly, loving, mutch beloved, was honored with ye dignitie of Knighthood by due deserts in ye Field, in which Bedd of Honor hee willingly would have ended his dayes, but it pleased his most Merciful Redeemer to bringe him to his Grave in Christian Peace, yet so farr condescended to his honourable desire yt in his Countree's service he tooke his deadlie sickness. If ye times (more happily flourishing under gratious Astraea) had been answerable to his heroicall designes without all doubt hee could not have had (according to ye strange Italian proverb) "his beake greater than his wings" •

 

I finally refer inquisitive searchers into men's fame to ye true Report even of he most malitious; and recommende ye gallant pattern of his life, together with his repentant Patience and assured Faith at ye Point of Death to his owne and to all Posterytie.

Litchis .

Le litchi, ou letchi, est un fruit comestible. Il est produit par Litchi chinensis, une espèce d'arbre tropical de la famille des Sapindaceae, le seul représentant du genre Litchi.

 

La partie consommée est l'arille juteux qui entoure une graine unique. Le litchi ressemble, par sa structure, à d'autre fruits tropicaux de la même famille : le longane (ou longani), le ramboutan (ou « litchi chevelu »), la quenette.

 

Le nom provient du chinois 荔枝 ou en pinyin lìzhī. L'arbre est originaire de Chine où sa culture est attestée depuis plus de 2 100 ans4.

 

L'espèce a été introduite pour la production fruitière dans d'autres régions tropicales, en Inde, au Vietnam, à Madagascar, en Thaïlande, à Hawaii, à La Réunion, Maurice et Comores (où le fruit est appelé letchi et l'arbre pied de letchi), en Nouvelle-Calédonie (renommée pour les letchis de Houaïlou), au Brésil dans l'État de São Paulo, etc.

 

I hope you like this poster.

Is an ad witch I made for my local clients.

HRL0919

Cueilli le 19 septembre 2011.

 

Chapeau 6,5-11 cm de diamètre, visqueux.

Pied 4-6 x 1,6-2,2 cm, farci puis creux.

Chair blanche.

Sporée brune

Odeur fruitée dans les lames, raphanoïde dans la chair.

Dans une forêt de chênes rouges.

 

Cet hébélome se caractérise par sa grande taille et son pied orné d'écailles détersiles formant des bandes plus ou moins concentriques.

 

J'avais d'abord nommé cette espèce Hebeloma sinapizans, mais une analyse génétique par Henry Beker a révélé qu'il s'agissait d'Hebeloma megacarpum, espèce nord-américaine décrite par Grilli en 2005 d'après une collection d'Alexander Smith. L'espèce serait présente à la grandeur du continent américain. Beker croit qu'il existe peut-être un synonyme plus ancien, mais cela n'a pas encore été prouvé génétiquement. Il est donc possible que l'espèce change de nom dans un proche avenir.

 

La principale différence microscopique avec H. sinapizans est la forme des cheilocystides, qui sont ventrues et non renflées à l'apex chez H. sinapizans, mais cylindriques-clavées chez H. megacarpum. Voir ma planche micro : www.flickr.com/photos/21189203@N05/6866728548/in/photostream

 

Le nom Hebeloma sinapizans devrait donc être retiré de l'index de MycoQuebec, car il s'agit d'une espèce strictement européenne.

Waltham Abbey, Essex

 

Sir Edward Denny was actually interred in the family mausoleum, which stood on the other side of the east wall of the south aisle of the church. His wife, Lady Margaret, daughter of Pierce Edgecombe, Lord Mountedgecombe, outlived her husband by forty-eight years and was buried at Bishop s Stortford during the Civil War. Because she had been a Lady-in-Waiting to Queen Elizabeth 1, Queen Anne of Denmark and Queen Henrietta Maria, it was not thought safe to bring her body across strongly Parliamentarian territory for interment at Waltham, and also, because her eldest son had been killed fighting in Ireland and she had supported his widow and children, there was probably insufficient money available to do so.

 

Sir Edward Denny was the younger son of Sir Anthony Denny, Lord of the Manor of Waltham, who had leased the site of the Abbey from the Crown after the Dissolution in 1540. Sir Edward was born circa 1547 and died in 1599 (1600 by modern reckoning the New Year began on March 25th before 1752). He spent the greater part of his adult life as a soldier fighting for Queen Elizabeth 1 in Ireland, where he was castellan of Tralee Castle, but he also sailed with Sir Humphrey Gilbert in 1583 to claim Newfoundland for England, and served in the Channel fleet against the Spanish Armada in 1588, on both occasions leaving his wife in command at Tralee. They had ten children - seven boys and three girls, and they may be seen praying for the souls of their parents, below the effigies. The boy and girl with linked arms were twins, the boys with swords were of age when their father died, and the girls with ruffs were married.

 

The coats of arms at the top of the monument are: on your left, Denny impaling Mountedgecombe (the Edgecombe arms are reversed for some unknown reason): in the centre, 1st and 4th Denny, 2nd More (not the same family as Sir Thomas More, who also had Waltham connections), 3rd Troutbeck: on your right, Denny.

 

The figures of Youth and Age appear on either side of the arch above the effigies - Youth is blowing bubbles. Under the arch is a painted grapevine, representing Christ, the True Vine. Under the canopy are moon, stars and clouds. Roses are set on three sides of the inscription. They may have been meant for Tudor roses, but are actually Lancastrian. The inscription is difficult to read, so it is set out overleaf. Various marbles have been used in the tomb, but the figures are carved in Tottenhoe stone

from Buckinghamshire.

 

The monument was designed and made by lsaac James and Bartholomew Adye, who were London craftsmen, and made several similar tombs in London and the Home Counties. It was restored in 1965 by Miss l. Norholt, and again by Nimbus in 1990, when it was found that it had been built over the remains of a 14thC, piscina (a basin with drain in which the Communion vessels were washed after Mass).

 

The inscription reads:

 

“An epitaph upon ye death of ye right worthie Sir Edward Denny, Sonn of ye Right Honourable Sr Anthony Denny, Counseller of Estate and Executor to King Henry ye 8, and of Joan Champnon his wife; who belnge of Queen Elizabeth’s Private chamber and one of ye Counsell of Munster in Ireland, was Governor of Kerry and Desmonde, and Collonell of certain Irishe Forces there; Depted this life about ye 52 yere of his age, ye xiith of Feb. 1599. He is offred to ye view and consideration of ye Discreete reader a spectacle of Pietie and Pittie, the Pittie kindly proceeding from a vertuous Ladie, daughter of Pierce Edgecombe of Mounts Edgecombe, Esquier, and sumtime Maid of Honor to Queene Elizabeth, hath out of meane fortune but no means affection produced this Monument dedicate to the remembrance of her deare husband. The Pietie must inwardly be concevyed and considered in ye person of ye dead carkeys here interred cut off like a pleasunt fruite before perfect ripeness. This weorthey Knight here represented, religious, wise, just, liberal, right valiant, most active,Learning‘s friend, Pride’s foe, kindly, loving, mutch beloved, was honored with ye dignitie of Knighthood by due deserts in ye Field, in which Bedd of Honor hee willingly would have ended his dayes, but it pleased his most Merciful Redeemer to bringe him to his Grave in Christian Peace, yet so farr condescended to his honourable desire yt in his Countree's service he tooke his deadlie sickness. If ye times (more happily flourishing under gratious Astraea) had been answerable to his heroicall designes without all doubt hee could not have had (according to ye strange Italian proverb) "his beake greater than his wings" •

 

I finally refer inquisitive searchers into men's fame to ye true Report even of he most malitious; and recommende ye gallant pattern of his life, together with his repentant Patience and assured Faith at ye Point of Death to his owne and to all Posterytie.

Waltham Abbey, Essex

 

Sir Edward Denny was actually interred in the family mausoleum, which stood on the other side of the east wall of the south aisle of the church. His wife, Lady Margaret, daughter of Pierce Edgecombe, Lord Mountedgecombe, outlived her husband by forty-eight years and was buried at Bishop s Stortford during the Civil War. Because she had been a Lady-in-Waiting to Queen Elizabeth 1, Queen Anne of Denmark and Queen Henrietta Maria, it was not thought safe to bring her body across strongly Parliamentarian territory for interment at Waltham, and also, because her eldest son had been killed fighting in Ireland and she had supported his widow and children, there was probably insufficient money available to do so.

 

Sir Edward Denny was the younger son of Sir Anthony Denny, Lord of the Manor of Waltham, who had leased the site of the Abbey from the Crown after the Dissolution in 1540. Sir Edward was born circa 1547 and died in 1599 (1600 by modern reckoning the New Year began on March 25th before 1752). He spent the greater part of his adult life as a soldier fighting for Queen Elizabeth 1 in Ireland, where he was castellan of Tralee Castle, but he also sailed with Sir Humphrey Gilbert in 1583 to claim Newfoundland for England, and served in the Channel fleet against the Spanish Armada in 1588, on both occasions leaving his wife in command at Tralee. They had ten children - seven boys and three girls, and they may be seen praying for the souls of their parents, below the effigies. The boy and girl with linked arms were twins, the boys with swords were of age when their father died, and the girls with ruffs were married.

 

The coats of arms at the top of the monument are: on your left, Denny impaling Mountedgecombe (the Edgecombe arms are reversed for some unknown reason): in the centre, 1st and 4th Denny, 2nd More (not the same family as Sir Thomas More, who also had Waltham connections), 3rd Troutbeck: on your right, Denny.

 

The figures of Youth and Age appear on either side of the arch above the effigies - Youth is blowing bubbles. Under the arch is a painted grapevine, representing Christ, the True Vine. Under the canopy are moon, stars and clouds. Roses are set on three sides of the inscription. They may have been meant for Tudor roses, but are actually Lancastrian. The inscription is difficult to read, so it is set out overleaf. Various marbles have been used in the tomb, but the figures are carved in Tottenhoe stone

from Buckinghamshire.

 

The monument was designed and made by lsaac James and Bartholomew Adye, who were London craftsmen, and made several similar tombs in London and the Home Counties. It was restored in 1965 by Miss l. Norholt, and again by Nimbus in 1990, when it was found that it had been built over the remains of a 14thC, piscina (a basin with drain in which the Communion vessels were washed after Mass).

 

The inscription reads:

 

“An epitaph upon ye death of ye right worthie Sir Edward Denny, Sonn of ye Right Honourable Sr Anthony Denny, Counseller of Estate and Executor to King Henry ye 8, and of Joan Champnon his wife; who belnge of Queen Elizabeth’s Private chamber and one of ye Counsell of Munster in Ireland, was Governor of Kerry and Desmonde, and Collonell of certain Irishe Forces there; Depted this life about ye 52 yere of his age, ye xiith of Feb. 1599. He is offred to ye view and consideration of ye Discreete reader a spectacle of Pietie and Pittie, the Pittie kindly proceeding from a vertuous Ladie, daughter of Pierce Edgecombe of Mounts Edgecombe, Esquier, and sumtime Maid of Honor to Queene Elizabeth, hath out of meane fortune but no means affection produced this Monument dedicate to the remembrance of her deare husband. The Pietie must inwardly be concevyed and considered in ye person of ye dead carkeys here interred cut off like a pleasunt fruite before perfect ripeness. This weorthey Knight here represented, religious, wise, just, liberal, right valiant, most active,Learning‘s friend, Pride’s foe, kindly, loving, mutch beloved, was honored with ye dignitie of Knighthood by due deserts in ye Field, in which Bedd of Honor hee willingly would have ended his dayes, but it pleased his most Merciful Redeemer to bringe him to his Grave in Christian Peace, yet so farr condescended to his honourable desire yt in his Countree's service he tooke his deadlie sickness. If ye times (more happily flourishing under gratious Astraea) had been answerable to his heroicall designes without all doubt hee could not have had (according to ye strange Italian proverb) "his beake greater than his wings" •

 

I finally refer inquisitive searchers into men's fame to ye true Report even of he most malitious; and recommende ye gallant pattern of his life, together with his repentant Patience and assured Faith at ye Point of Death to his owne and to all Posterytie.

Espèce : Aphroditeola olida / Aphrodite odorante

No de fongarium : pat0907

Date : 8 octobre 2021

Station : Arboretum de Trécesson, La Ferme, Abitibi-Témiscamingue

 

Récolteur : Patrick Poitras

Déterminateur : Patrick Poitras

 

Habitat : forêt mixte dominée par les conifères

Substrat : au sol, parmi les aiguilles, sous des épinettes, entre autres

 

Mode de croissance : grégaire et cespiteux

 

CARACTÈRES MACROSCOPIQUES

 

Pileus déprimé, 1,4-2 cm de diam., irrégulier, finement fibrilleux, rosé, marge enroulée.

Hyménophore constitué de plis décurrents, épais, fourchus dichotomiquement, interveinés, blanchâtres.

Stipe excentré, 0,6-1,4 cm de longueur, 0,3-0,6 cm de diam., blanchâtre, taché de rosâtre et de rougeâtre.

Odeur fruitée, de gomme balloune, saveur particulière.

 

Un autre taxon fantôme ressuscité à l'aide de l'ITS!

 

YL3507 (CMMF).

Contrecoeur (Montérégie), 13 septembre 2000.

Habitat: sur sol sablonneux, dans une vieille forêt de chênes rouges, avec quelques pins blancs isolés.

 

J’ai découvert ce cortinaire très bien caractérisé pour la première fois en 1999. Cette année-là, les basidiomes étaient tous vieux, mais je savais tout de même que sa couleur blanc argenté et sa forte odeur de poire acidulée en faisaient une espèce "bien spéciale". Mais comme il n’y avait pas de jeune sur place, une étude critique était impossible, ne pouvant pas observer certains caractères importants comme la couleur des lames avant sporulation. Mon enthousiasme m’a donc encouragé à marquer l’endroit et à attendre une autre année pour l’étudier.

 

En 2000, je me suis rendu sur le site quelques jours plus tôt et j’ai eu la chance de faire la récolte illustrée ci-dessus. Il y avait des exemplaires à tous les stades de développement, ce qui est absolument nécessaire quand c’est le temps d’identifier une espèce que l’on ne connaît pas, et qui en plus s’avère être une entité apparemment non décrite.

 

J’ai alors pu voir que les lames des jeunes étaient brunes et faisaient contraste avec la couleur du chapeau, du pied, du voile général et de la cortine. De plus, certains basidiomes étaient imbus, ce qui m'a permis d’observer une certaine hygrophanéité, le chapeau devenant alors brun et la chair, marbrée de brun.

 

Les cortinaires du sous-genre Telamonia, trapus et peu hygrophanes comme celui-ci, peuvent être qualifiées de "subhygrophane", car le chapeau n’est jamais complètement translucide. On ne peut donc jamais y voir les lames par transparence (p. ex. Cortinarius traganus, C. armillatus, etc.).

 

Enfin, le gros bulbe marginé s’ajoute aux autres caractéristiques bien distinctives de cette espèce.

 

DESCRIPTION

Chap. atteignant 4-9 cm de diamètre, blanc à argenté, chatoyant, parfois brun par imbibition lorsqu’imbu (subhygrophane), fibrilleux, non visqueux.

Chair épaisse, ferme, blanchâtre, marbré de brun à entièrement brune lorsqu’imbue, surtout dans le haut du pied.

Lames plutôt serrées et étroites, adnexées puis sinuées, brunes puis brun rouillé par les spores, érodées et plus pâles à l’arête, interveinées.

Odeur forte dans les lames des basidiomes approchant la maturité, très agréable, fruitée, rappelant les poires non mûres (un peu acidulée), semblable à celle de C. traganus et de C. venustus.

Sporée brun rouille.

Pied atteignant 4-5 x 1-2,5 cm, ferme, blanc argenté, brun lorsque froissement fortement, terminé par un gros bulbe marginé pouvant atteindre 4,5 cm de largeur.

Voile général copieux, blanc argenté. Cortine concolore.

Le basidiome tout entier peut se tacher se brun au toucher lorsqu’imbu.

Sp. ovoïdes-lacrymoïdes, moyennement verruqueuses, 8-9 x 4,5-5 µm.

KOH 10 %: réaction grisâtre sur tous les tissus.

 

Nous avons la chance que cette espèce s’ajoute aux rares cortinaires faciles à reconnaître à l’oeil nu. Avec de tels caractères distinctifs, le fait que je n’ai trouvé aucun nom à mettre sur cette espèce suggère fortement qu’il s’agisse d’une espèce non décrite.

 

Alors j’ai décidé de lui assigner un nom provisoire en attendant qu’elle soit soumise à des études génétiques pour mieux connaître les espèces affines. André Jean a eu la gentillesse de me suggérer le nom latin «pyriolens» (à odeur de poire), ainsi que d’y attribuer un joli nom français.

 

YL

 

ADDENDUM

 

Grâce à l’obtention d’autres récoltes provenant de différentes stations au Québec, ce cortinaire est maintenant mieux connu. Ces récoltes ont toutes été faites sous le chêne rouge, autant dans la région de Montréal, de Sorel (Montérégie) que de Montebello (Outaouais).

 

Ce que nous avons appris est que les basidiomes de ce cortinaire peuvent rarement être teintés de violet par endroits: à la marge du chapeau, sur le voile général, dans les lames, dans le haut du pied ainsi que dans la chair.

 

Une étude génétique d’une des récoltes provenant du Québec en vue de la comparer avec le type d’une espèce européenne, Phlegmacium scaurotraganoides Rob. Henry. On sait maintenant qu'il s'agit plutôt de C. subrimosus A. H. Sm.

  

MERCI À:

 

- André Paul, Renée Lebeuf, Christiane Corbeil et Michel Corbeil, pour avoir fourni des spécimens et pour s’être occupés de la correspondance avec Tuula Niskanen, spécialiste des Cortinarius.

 

- Guillaume Eyssartier, pour avoir suggérer le nom “Cortinarius scaurotraganoides” après avoir vu ma collection sur Mycoquébec.

 

- Tuula Niskanen et Kare Liimatainen, pour avoir confirmé la présence de cette espèce au Québec, à l’aide de leur étude génétique permettant de comparer l’espèce américaine au type de Phlegmacium scaurotraganoides Rob. Henry.

 

- À Raymond Archambault, pour l’envoi d’un exsiccata de la collection ci-dessus à Michel Corbeil.

 

- À Jacques Landry, pour avoir trouvé "son vrai nom"!

 

-----

OUVRAGES CONSULTÉS

 

BRANDRUD, T. E., B. DIMA & G. SCHMIDT-STOHN, 2012. «Cortinarius species in acidophilous-eutrophic (but not calciphilous) oak forests of S Norway and Hungary». Journal des J. E. C.:14: 7-26.

 

HENRY, R., 1986. «Suite à l’étude des cortinaires». Bull. Soc. Myc. Fr., 102: 19-96.

 

J. Landry, Y. Lamoureux, R. Lebeuf, A. Paul, H. Lambert et R. Labbé (2021). "Répertoire des cortinaires du Québec". Mycoquébec. org., Québec, 552 p.

 

YL

Forêt de conifère

Croissance sur débris de de forêt

Chapeau mes specimen 12cm

Odeur fruitée anis fort

Blue quand coupée

 

Trouvé par Gilles Levaseur

est un champignon avec un beau chapeau hémisphérique (5 a 20 cm), bien en chair, de couleur brun tabac, parsemé de taches brun rougeâtre qui peuvent être, jaune olive avec des tubes jaune olive qui bleuissent en vieillissant. Ces tubes sont terminés par des pores rouge sang devenant orangés et puis jaune orangé, qui bleuissent lorsqu’on les touche. Il a un pied épais de couleur jaune orangé finement moucheté de petits points rouge vif (3-15x2-5cm). Sa chair de couleur jaune vif est épaisse et demeure bien ferme mais bleuit fortement à la coupe et puis passe au rouge sombre un peu plus tard. Elle est rarement véreuse. Il a une odeur faiblement fruitée et une saveur douce. Il pousse sur le sol dans tous les bois (aussi bien dans les résineux que les feuillus) de l'été à la fin de l'automne.

BelgiBeer vous devoile le veritable patrimoine belge, reconnu mondialement pour la qualite et la variete de ses produits, mais pourtant largement meconnu du grand public !

 

BelgiBeer, des Box bieres 100% artisanales !

 

Dans nos box bieres, nous mettons pour vous chaque mois le meilleur des petites et moyennes brasseries belges, que nous allons chercher directement chez elles. Chaque mois, BelgiBeer vous fait decouvrir une brasserie artisanale differente.

 

Brasserie : Van Eecke

En ce nouveau mois d'une toute nouvelle annee, c'est la Brasserie Van Eecke qui est mise a l'honneur. Durant notre pelerinage de la biere artisanale belge, nous avons decouvert cette brasserie aux bieres delicieuses qui ne seront pas de trop pour lutter contre le froid et le blues du retour des vacances de fin d'annee. Cette brasserie, creee en 1624 dans le nord-ouest de la Flandre, fut reprise en 1962 par la famille Leroy, brasseurs de pere en fils. Aujourd'hui, Philip et Hendrik Leroy ont repris le flambeau et nous transmettent tout leur savoir-faire avec passion. A travers les differentes degustations, l'histoire de cette brasserie resonne en bouche. Et s'il ne reste pas de recette datant de sa creation, la brasserie utilise neanmoins le houblon de cette region que les habitants ont replante apres un long travail.

 

*Kapittel Blond

 

Corps trouble, dore.

Malte et fruite.

Gout prononce, agrumes, amertume.

 

*Kapittel Dubbel

 

Couleur brune, grande belle mousse.

Fruite

Legere amertume, caramel, fruits et saveurs epicees.

 

*Kapittel Triple ABT

 

Couleur ambree et mousse cremeuse.

Alcool equilibre avec des aromes de fleurs.

Corps rond, legerement houblonne et sucre.

 

*Watou's Wit Bier

 

Doree pale, mousse blanche.

Coriandre, agrumes et levure fruitee

Frais, sec et epice.

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Info

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Lens: Nikor 85.0 mm f/1.8 (at 85)

Shutter Speed: 1/200 sec

Aperture: f/9

ISO: 200

 

Lighting

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Processing: Photoshop CS3

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Signature

Waltham Abbey, Essex

 

Sir Edward Denny was actually interred in the family mausoleum, which stood on the other side of the east wall of the south aisle of the church. His wife, Lady Margaret, daughter of Pierce Edgecombe, Lord Mountedgecombe, outlived her husband by forty-eight years and was buried at Bishop s Stortford during the Civil War. Because she had been a Lady-in-Waiting to Queen Elizabeth 1, Queen Anne of Denmark and Queen Henrietta Maria, it was not thought safe to bring her body across strongly Parliamentarian territory for interment at Waltham, and also, because her eldest son had been killed fighting in Ireland and she had supported his widow and children, there was probably insufficient money available to do so.

 

Sir Edward Denny was the younger son of Sir Anthony Denny, Lord of the Manor of Waltham, who had leased the site of the Abbey from the Crown after the Dissolution in 1540. Sir Edward was born circa 1547 and died in 1599 (1600 by modern reckoning the New Year began on March 25th before 1752). He spent the greater part of his adult life as a soldier fighting for Queen Elizabeth 1 in Ireland, where he was castellan of Tralee Castle, but he also sailed with Sir Humphrey Gilbert in 1583 to claim Newfoundland for England, and served in the Channel fleet against the Spanish Armada in 1588, on both occasions leaving his wife in command at Tralee. They had ten children - seven boys and three girls, and they may be seen praying for the souls of their parents, below the effigies. The boy and girl with linked arms were twins, the boys with swords were of age when their father died, and the girls with ruffs were married.

 

The coats of arms at the top of the monument are: on your left, Denny impaling Mountedgecombe (the Edgecombe arms are reversed for some unknown reason): in the centre, 1st and 4th Denny, 2nd More (not the same family as Sir Thomas More, who also had Waltham connections), 3rd Troutbeck: on your right, Denny.

 

The figures of Youth and Age appear on either side of the arch above the effigies - Youth is blowing bubbles. Under the arch is a painted grapevine, representing Christ, the True Vine. Under the canopy are moon, stars and clouds. Roses are set on three sides of the inscription. They may have been meant for Tudor roses, but are actually Lancastrian. The inscription is difficult to read, so it is set out overleaf. Various marbles have been used in the tomb, but the figures are carved in Tottenhoe stone

from Buckinghamshire.

 

The monument was designed and made by lsaac James and Bartholomew Adye, who were London craftsmen, and made several similar tombs in London and the Home Counties. It was restored in 1965 by Miss l. Norholt, and again by Nimbus in 1990, when it was found that it had been built over the remains of a 14thC, piscina (a basin with drain in which the Communion vessels were washed after Mass).

 

The inscription reads:

 

“An epitaph upon ye death of ye right worthie Sir Edward Denny, Sonn of ye Right Honourable Sr Anthony Denny, Counseller of Estate and Executor to King Henry ye 8, and of Joan Champnon his wife; who belnge of Queen Elizabeth’s Private chamber and one of ye Counsell of Munster in Ireland, was Governor of Kerry and Desmonde, and Collonell of certain Irishe Forces there; Depted this life about ye 52 yere of his age, ye xiith of Feb. 1599. He is offred to ye view and consideration of ye Discreete reader a spectacle of Pietie and Pittie, the Pittie kindly proceeding from a vertuous Ladie, daughter of Pierce Edgecombe of Mounts Edgecombe, Esquier, and sumtime Maid of Honor to Queene Elizabeth, hath out of meane fortune but no means affection produced this Monument dedicate to the remembrance of her deare husband. The Pietie must inwardly be concevyed and considered in ye person of ye dead carkeys here interred cut off like a pleasunt fruite before perfect ripeness. This weorthey Knight here represented, religious, wise, just, liberal, right valiant, most active,Learning‘s friend, Pride’s foe, kindly, loving, mutch beloved, was honored with ye dignitie of Knighthood by due deserts in ye Field, in which Bedd of Honor hee willingly would have ended his dayes, but it pleased his most Merciful Redeemer to bringe him to his Grave in Christian Peace, yet so farr condescended to his honourable desire yt in his Countree's service he tooke his deadlie sickness. If ye times (more happily flourishing under gratious Astraea) had been answerable to his heroicall designes without all doubt hee could not have had (according to ye strange Italian proverb) "his beake greater than his wings" •

 

I finally refer inquisitive searchers into men's fame to ye true Report even of he most malitious; and recommende ye gallant pattern of his life, together with his repentant Patience and assured Faith at ye Point of Death to his owne and to all Posterytie.

C'est bien le 3200

07.07.2013 - Sortie du jardin, réellement délicieusement fruitée et sucrée, miam ...

Taken with a Sony Ericsson X10 mini pro.

 

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Chapeau jusqu’au 8cm. visqueux couler variable rouge violet gris jaune marge strié.

Lames serre blanc a crème ocre par ses spores.

Pied clave courbé ver le bas blanc et rouge vin foncé

Odeur fruitée

Saveur acre

Sporée E (voir photo)

Croissance forêt mixte vieux pruche présent.

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