View allAll Photos Tagged toadstool
Rain is just perfect to encourage these fungi. Seen growing at the base of an old tree.
It may be Honey Fungus - Armillaria mellea Anyone know for sure?
Week 40
🍄 Is this the first Toadstool of the year or is it the last one left from the mild wet winter? 🤔 Nature always keeps us guessing! The mystery and magic of spotting such a unique fungi in changing seasons reminds us of the beauty that surrounds us every day. Let's appreciate each moment of wonder as we uncover more secrets hidden within our everyday lives. What do you think, early bloom or resilient survivor? Explore and ponder with me! 🌿✨
Eine vom Parkplatz am Highway 89 ausgehende Wanderung von ca. 3km Länge führt zu bizarr geformten Sandsteinfelsen. Diese Hoodoos nehmen nicht selten die Form von überdimensionalen Pilzen an.
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A 3km hike starting from the parking lot on Highway 89 leads to bizarrely shaped sandstone cliffs. These hoodoos often take the form of oversized mushrooms.
I haven't done anything to the background colour - that's how it came out. It was still almost dark when this was taken.....
This strip of southern Utah and northern Arizona has so many special places. Toadstool Hoodoos are on a plateau a short hike from the highway.
Toadstool Geologic Park is a featured destination on the Great Plains Trail. It's 23 miles by foot from Crawford in far western Nebraska. If it looks like a smaller version of Badlands National Park, that's what it is.
Follow the Great Plains Trail: www.greatplainstrail.org/
Taken at dusk, obviously, when the moon was almost full. It was pretty dark by the time we hiked back to the car. I'm not a big fan of hiking in the desert in the dark without any flashlight!! I really do enjoy when the bats come out here at dusk though. You can see them so much better out here and they are amazing to watch. I slept on the top deck of the houseboat and loved watching them swoop and dive, sometimes VERY close.
There were loads of these dinner plate sized fungi, and some were growing in a (wonky) line too (see in comments). No idea of the species!
Prees Heath - Shropshire
I made up the name because I doubt that these toadstools have an official name. But the Fisher Towers and the Titan loom just 2 to 3 miles to the west (left), so I thought these should be Fisher Toadstools, though they are dwarfed by the graceful Towers. Scamper up and down the steep slope at the highest resolution--see how many toadstools you can find.
Shot from the Rim of Waring Mesa, which looks over the Fisher Towers, Professor Valley, and the La Sal Mountains.
From the archives! This one always cracks me up.. so I thought you might get a smile to start your weekend! I didn't have the program to properly edit the raw file back in 2007 so this is re-edited.
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Toadstool trail in Arizona... Utah? Arizona... Somewhere really close to the border haha.