Mistletoe (Viscum album) does not grow locally as this distribution map from the BSBI website shows:
Sunday, December 12, 2021
Mistletoe
Mistletoe (Viscum album) does not grow locally as this distribution map from the BSBI website shows:
Friday, November 26, 2021
Dangerous Lichen Hunting?
In my quest to improve my lichen knowledge, I joined a Zoom beginners course and after it was finished, our small group continues to meet by Zoom fortnightly to discuss whatever lichens we have seen. The last time, we talked about a group of lichens called Stereocaulon. These are small (aren't they all!) grey bobbly lichens that grow on rock or soil.
| Looking downstream with the swimming spot off to the left. |
Two weeks ago, I wanted to take more photos of the Stereocaulon. It rained heavily but after lunch the rain stopped and at 2.30 I decided to take the dog for a walk while I found the Stereocaulon again. It gets dark quite early now so I took the car and parked at Shepherd's Bridge then took the upper route down to the river and safely negotiated the steep path down. There was one last change in level, and I thought it looked a bit slippy so took it carefully. A fateful move.... the next thing I knew I was on my bottom on the grass below, my legs stretched out in front of me and the ominous sound of a crack. Looking down, my right ankle was at a very strange angle and I knew I had probably broken it. The ankle waggled on my leg as if no longer connected. Taking out my mobile phone to ring for help, I found there was no mobile signal. What now? No one knew exactly where I was, just "up the Glen" and it would be dark in an hour.
Saturday, October 23, 2021
Oaks and Acorns
For the first time, I have noticed plenty of acorns on the oaks trees that I have seen alongside the Calder on the Wildcat Trail, and on a walk on Kinrara Estate (near Aviemore). Thirty years ago, my daughter wanted an oak tree for her birthday and we looked in vain for some local acorns in the woods at Kincraig but failed to find any that year. We bought a sapling and it is still growing in the garden - and it is her birthday today...
There are two kinds of common oaks (there are actually lots of kinds of oak but let's keep it simple!) called the English Oak (Quercus robur) and the Sessile Oak (Quercus petraea). The latter is more common in the North. The word "sessile" means seated and when used about a plant it means that there is no stalk or a very short one. Confusingly, the sessile part of the name in Sessile Oak does not refer to the leaves, but to the acorns - it has acorns that sit on the twig, but leaves that have a stalk. Whereas the English Oak has acorns with a stalk and the leaves are sessile! I must admit that I find it hard to judge between them from that characteristic. Perhaps an easier way is to look at the shape of the leaves. The Sessile Oak has wavy lobes whereas the English Oak leaves are a bit irregular. I think most of what I see is the Sessile Oak but apparently there is quite a bit of variation with the leaves like one sort and the acorns like the other! So maybe is it not surprising that I get confused. However, they are lovely trees to look at, whatever their name.
The bark on the thick trunks was quite furrowed and when I went for a closer look, there were greener patches with tiny black dots.
| The furrowed bark (with a hand for scale!) |
Thursday, September 30, 2021
When is a fungus not a fungus?
| The tree stump |
| Getting closer |
Friday, September 17, 2021
Fruits, fungus and flies
Autumn is coming at last, after what has felt like an extended summer with no frosts yet. Some of the birch leaves ae turning yellow and many of the plants have gone to seed or are bearing fruit. This post will be heavy on photos as I have been capturing some of the different fruits I have seen locally.
But before then, a bit more on the fungus I mentioned in my last post (Amanita crocea). One of the toadstools became food for another fungus and grew a cap of white hair:
And I thought no fungus post would be complete without a photo of Fly Agaric, the archetypal fairy toadstool, which is quite plentiful locally.The toadstools are actually the fruits of the fungus and are grown to distribute its spores. The rest of the plant is beneath the ground as a network of threads.
The bright red colour of many fruits seems particularly attractive to birds and in October the migrating Fieldfares and Redwings will strip the Rowan of its berries.
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| Rowan |
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| Rosehips |
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| Honeysuckle berries |
Wednesday, September 8, 2021
A few Fungi
There are several fungi appearing in my garden and in the woods. They grow quite quickly to start with so I took a series of photos of one by my veg patch:
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| Day 1@ 9am, Day 1 @5pm, Days 2,3,4,5 |
The most interesting part is the first couple of days and then it looks much the same apart from the cap turning up. I think this particular fungus is Amanita crocea as it has a bright orange-yellow colour. It emerges from a sac which stays as a ragged collar at the base of the stalk which has felty orange scales. The underside of the cap has a series of gills which produce spores. My book says "Widespread but locally distributed and nowhere common" (except perhaps in my garden!).
It prefers growing under birch which is exactly where it is. I was clearing some grass to make a flower bed and found lots more at different stages.
You can see the edge of the cap rolls under, so I think this might be Brown Roll-Rim which is poisonous.
This pale yellow one, I think, is Larch Bolete which grows only with Larch trees. Instead of gills, the underside of the cap has lots of little pores . Having pores rather than gills is a characteristic of the Boletes, most of which are edible - but not necessarily tasty..
I would not recommend eating anything unless you are 100% sure of the species.
Saturday, August 21, 2021
Lichens by water
If you are not interested in lichens, then this is not the post for you! During the spell of hot weather when family were visiting, we went to the Falls of Truim for some swimming, paddling, and lichen hunting. I remember swimming there in the 1970s, but it was not exactly as I remembered it (maybe some changes over 50 years...). The descent to the river was much steeper than expected (one approach even had a rope to hang on to!) and the dry, dusty surface was slippy. Once down there though, the rocks were pleasantly warm to sit on, the water deliciously cooling, and there were several lichens to intrigue me.
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| The rocks that would normally be under water were scoured clean of any growth |
Just above the sloping rocks was a vertical step and several lichens grew there.
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| A variety of different lichens on the vertical "step" |
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The most interesting lichen was on a vertical face higher up the slopes and was abundant.
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| Lichen when wet |
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| The black "pimples" |
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