View allAll Photos Tagged fungi

Have a nice weekend

 

Thanks for your visit and comments, I appreciate that very much!

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © all rights reserved.

 

Regards, Bram (BraCom)

 

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It's the time of the year.

A lovely cluster of mushrooms.

♡♡

Day 297. Spotted this in the garden this morning.

Hunting for Mushrooms and fungi

Messing woods

20th October 2019

in the wood, Bakkeveen, The Netherlands

Lifespan: Sept. 25 - Oct. 24, 2022

 

[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)]

 

😄 Happy Sliders Sunday 😄

 

Put 9 different growth stages of the same fungi together into one frame

ready to upload for the group

Sliders Sunday

 

Canon EOS 450D - EF 70-300 mm IS USM

Æ’/5.6

1/60 Sec

ISO 400

[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)

 

😄 HaPpY Sliders Sunday 😄

 

Photo of Fungi on Ashwood taken March 18, 2021 - enhanced saturation and colour temperature then framed it using the Flickr Photo Editor and uploaded for the

Sliders Sunday Group

 

Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ200

Æ’/4.0

44 mm

1/200 Sec

ISO 100

Taken for the Smile on Saturday theme of Mushrooms - HSoS. I think it may be a parasol mushroom but if anyone can ID please do!

 

Similar to the Pleated Inkcap but with minute erect hairs on the cap centre. Widespread and common.

 

Walking through the woods where you have already spotted fungi, you have to be careful where you tread. These two were alone in the grass and very nearly stepped on by me!

Essex Belfairs NR.

Dunham Massey sept 2020

1. All fungi are edible.

2. Some fungi are edible only once.

quote by Terry Pratchett.

 

2020-10-15_155816

From the archives.

 

Many thanks for your visits, kind comments and faves, very much appreciated.

On the forest floor, Zealandia, Wellington, New Zealand. Many different types of fungi have started appearing at Zealandia with the cooler and wetter autumn conditions. Mushroom Amanita Muscaria.

 

Fungi of beechwood: These are unusual looking bracket-like fungi the name of which I am not sure. Any ideas about ID would be much appreciated. They are attached with a small stalk to the wood and have white porous underside with irregular pores. I have taken picture of these fungi on the same fallen branch early in December last year and they didn’t grow much over a month (either slow growing or already full grown) and their porous side remains white too. This collage shows both upperside and underside of this group. Lansdown, Bath, BANES, England, U.K.

Found and photographed in different places in the Netherlands.

 

English and Latin name

From left to right top row

Fly Agaric (Amanita muscaria)

Gray Shag (Coprinopsis cinerea)

Bitter Bolete or the bitter tylopilus (Tylopilus felleus)

Penny Bun, Cep, Porcino (Boletus edulis)

Bottom row from left to right

False Chanterelle (Hygrophoropsis aurantiaca)

Strict-branch Coral (Ramaria stricta)

Bleeding Bonnet (Mycena sanguinolenta)

Fly Agaric (Amanita muscaria)

 

More Fungi photos in my Flickr Fungi Album

 

I would like to thank all, that you have taken the time to view and comment on my photos, it is very much appreciated.

 

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit written permission.copyright all rights reserved.

 

Regards, Bram van Broekhoven (BraCom)

 

My Homepage | Facebook | Instagram

 

 

Thank you for your comments & fav.!

After working 30 years on the steelworks, I’ve never noticed this tree stump next to our car park, and what a covering of fungi it has

4343

Taken Timble Forest Harrogate North Yorkshire.

Zoom in for better view

Some fungi in the fernery at the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens, Hobart.

Thanks to everyone for your visit, kind comments and faves! :-)

Much appreciated!

It was a magical day when I spied this tall mushroom showing off its beauty to the world....and the rest was photographic history. I'm crossing my fingers that this year I might find yet another of these little fungi sprouting in my back yard.

A cool looking fungi growing on a tree - looks like a seashell

Fungi are manifest in a multiplicity of folktales and fairy tales, and in folk remedies and rituals. They appear as foods, poisons, diseases, decorations, dyes or tinder, and even in insults, compliments, graffiti and video games. These and other impacts of fungi on folkways are here concisely reviewed under categories likely to interest professional and amateur mycologists and accessible to the lay reader. The evolution of popular perceptions of fungi is sketched from Shakespearean times through contemporary European and American cultures. Provided are specific instances of how different cultures utilized or avoided fungi, responded to fungal diseases of crops or humans, or viewed fungi in the context of popular belief, superstition or religion.

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