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One of the few seen this year
Not the sharpest or most interesting shot, but I wanted to add it to my Fungi of Alberta 4 album.
With a weather forecast of rain then mixed precipitation for a few days (8-10 September 2014), there were a couple of places that I thought I had better get to straight away. The first one was Brown-Lowery, to check if there were any mushrooms. I had been there recently, and only found a couple of things.
My visit on 6 September was slightly more rewarding and I found several large clusters of tiny mushrooms growing on tree stumps or at the base of trees. Also found a few patches of bright orange Coral Fungi, and two or three small mushrooms, including the one in this photo. I always like the fungi that develop a cracked pattern on the top of the cap.
Quite a few people were in the park, so I felt safer going a very short way in. Far enough, as it turned out, to watch a rare adult and a juvenile Three-toed Woodpecker feeding together on a tree trunk. The young one was copying Mom or Dad, but its soft squeaking sound resulted in the adult feeding it, too.
This year has not been a good year for mushrooms for various reasons, so I more or less gave up. Maybe next year will be better. Our two devastating snow storms on 9 and 10 September 2014 closed many/most of our parks and natural areas, and mushrooms would have been covered by a blanket of snow. Because leaves were still on the trees, the early, heavy snow destroyed or damaged thousands of trees in the city.
With a weather forecast of rain then mixed precipitation for a few days (8-10 September 2014), there were a couple of places that I thought I had better get to straight away. The first one was Brown-Lowery, to check if there were any mushrooms. I had been there recently, and only found a couple of things.
My visit on 6 September was slightly more rewarding and I found several large clusters of tiny mushrooms growing on tree stumps or at the base of trees. Also found a few patches of bright orange Coral Fungi, and two or three small mushrooms, including the one in this photo. I always like the fungi that develop a cracked pattern on the top of the cap.
Quite a few people were in the park, so I felt safer going a very short way in. Far enough, as it turned out, to watch a rare adult and a juvenile Three-toed Woodpecker feeding together on a tree trunk. The young one was copying Mom or Dad, but its soft squeaking sound resulted in the adult feeding it, too.
This year has not been a good year for mushrooms for various reasons, so I more or less gave up. Maybe next year will be better. Our two devastating snow storms on 9 and 10 September 2014 closed many/most of our parks and natural areas, and mushrooms would have been covered by a blanket of snow. Because leaves were still on the trees, the early, heavy snow destroyed or damaged thousands of trees in the city.
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