Picked for demonstration purposes - Honey Mushroom…
Aspen Roughstem Bolete / Leccinum insigne
Texture
False Morel fungus
An odd colour in nature
Why I would never eat wild mushrooms : )
McDougall Memorial United Church
Comb/Branched Hericium / Hericium ramosum
Strap/Coral Club / Clavariadelphus ligula
Trumpeter Swan
Gap Lake
Gray-crowned Rosy-Finches / Leucosticte tephrocoti…
Love the little one's expression
A beauty from mushroom season
Osprey on the hunt
Shingled/Scaly Hedgehog fungus / Sarcodon imbricat…
Hiding in the shadows
Two winters ago
Exshaw Legion memorial
False Morel fungus
Small fungi growing among the mosses
Winter in Kananaskis
Moose from the archives
Moose in the mountains
Picked for demonstration
Upper Kananaskis Lake
Colour among the mosses and lichens
Strawberries and cream fungus / Hydnellum peckii
Kananaskis - a winter wonderland
Forgetmenot Pond, Kananaskis
Shooting stars / Dodecatheon sp. (and Dandelions)
American Dipper / Cinclus mexicanus
White-crowned Sparrow / Zonotrichia leucophrys
Elbow Falls, Kananaskis
Tall Lungwort
Elbow Falls, Kananaskis
(Yellow?) Morel mushroom
Forgetmenot Pond, Kananaskis
Dandelion perfection
Forgetmenot Pond, Kananaskis
A splash of much-needed colour
Arnica sp.
Hearts at the Rusty Bucket Ranch
Sheep at the Rusty Bucket Ranch
Watch dog : )
Garden flowers at the Rusty Bucket Ranch
Wolf's Milk slime mold, Rusty Bucket Ranch
Purple/Water Avens seedhead / Geum rivale
Indian Paintbrush
Greenish-flowered Wintergreen / Pyrola chlorantha
Western Wood Lily
Star-flowered Solomon's Seal / Maianthemum stellat…
Little green hearts of White Camas
Patiently waiting
Red-tailed Hawk?
The colours of fall
A new-to-me old barn
Happy Halloween!
Lichens on nature trail at KOAC
Kinetic sculptures by Katie Ohe, KOAC
Pileated Woodpecker seen in Canmore
Bighorn Sheep mom and youngster
Twice the beauty
Exploring the forest
Mushroom in a wonderfully lush setting
One of my favourite meadows
Northern Gentian
Northern Willowherb / Epilobium ciliatum
Mt. Buller, Buller Pond, Kananaskis
A view from Mt. Shark
Strawberries and Cream fungus / Hydnellum peckii
A joy to behold
Slightly patterned
Treasures of the forest floor
Unidentified fungus
Wind-blown Osprey
Mt Lorette Ponds, Kananaskis
Paintbrush - green flowers, red bracts
Strawberries and cream fungus / Hydnellum peckii
Osprey take-off
Now they can't see me
01 Middle Lake, Bow Valley Provincial Park
02 Colourful Dock sp.
Little mystery bird - juvenile Yellow-rumped Warbl…
Brown-headed Cowbird juvenile
Ram's Horn Snail shell
Kalm's Lobelia / Lobelia kalmii
Fleabane
Willow Flycatcher
Middle Lake, Bow Valley Provincial Park
Mountain Death Camas / Zigadenus elegans
Gaillardia
Flycatcher sp. - Willow or Alder Flycatcher
Spotted Sandpiper
One of my favourite views
Yellow lady's-slipper
Yellow Warbler male
McDougall Memorial United Church
A day in the mountains
Tucked away near the creek
McDougall Memorial United Church
McDougall Memorial United Church
Little church in the valley
Moose cow looking for salt
When winter really was winter
The beauty of Lake Louise
A winter walk
Winter beauty
Snow, snow and more snow
Licking the salt
Sunlight on the low cloud
Morning awakes
Travelling the Cobble Flats road
Pine Siskin
Sparkles on Forgetmenot Pond
Deciduous yellow
Tundra Swans
Fence line in the fall
Peace in the Jumpingpound area
CL Ranches, Alberta
Unidentified flower, Seebe, Alberta - Echium vulga…
Tall Larkspur / Delphinium glaucum
The joy of peace and quiet
Forgetmenot Pond
Like a little flower
See also...
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Fine 'threads' of a mushroom veil
This is the Labour Day long weekend and it is very overcast and only 6C , forecast to soar to 13C this afternoon. Chilly! Rain in our forecast for the next four days. Labour Day in Canada is celebrated on the first Monday of September and it is a federal statutory holiday. It is also observed in the United States on the same day.
Yesterday, 3 September 2016, was a fungi day, quite rewarding and definitely fun. Our leader and friend, Karel, is very knowledgeable about fungi and yesterday he took 14 of us (plus Karel's two beautiful Beagles) on a foray to West Bragg Creek, maybe an hour's drive west of the city. We had been here a few times before over the years, either looking for fungi or on botany outings.
Photographing our findings usually means that I am way at the back of the group or have fallen back with a friend or two. Consequently, the mushrooms have often already been plucked/cut by the time we catch up to the rest of the participants. I also miss a lot of what is being said about IDs and details. It would take far too long to write down the name of each find - each photo taken would have to be carefully numbered so that the right name could be attached and this would be such a hassle when out with a group. I'm really hoping that Karel will eventually send out an email with photos and IDs. If not, or till then, my photos will have to be just nameless 'pretty pictures' : ) If you look closely, you can see all the very thin 'threads' that are joining the stem (stipe) with the shiny cap. This mass of threads is called a veil. Not sure if this is Cortinarius mucosus, commonly known as the orange webcap or the slimy cortinarius. It does have the cobweb-like annulus that protects the developing gills.
I met up with friend, Sandy, at 8:15 am and she drove out to the meeting place. My drive from home was done with my windshield wipers on my new car working non-stop - was it raining? No, it had rained the day before - hail, too, on my gleaming new vehicle that I had only had for five days! I needed to clean the windshield, but, once again, I couldn't for the life of me figure out how to turn the wipers off. Amazes me how complicated the wiper options are!
Our morning walk started off by going across the small bridge, then part way up the hill and then bush-whacking our way through the forest. This walk, which ended around lunch time, was the main one, but we did stop at a small, gravel parking area a few minutes along the main road, to do a second walk to check for any different mushrooms. This extra walk has yielded a few beauties in past years. Perhaps the most interesting find was a very small twig that had several tiny, turquoise coloured fungi cups on it. The colour looks so out of place in a natural area. My photos of them didn't turn out very well, but I will eventually post one of them.
From here, a few of us stopped at the Cinnamon Spoon cafe in Bragg Creek for lunch. Always a most enjoyable way to finish any outing. Before we climbed into the car for our return drive to Calgary, Sandy and I wandered into the beautiful Art Gallery, owned and run by Bob and Candy Cook. Named Branded Visuals Inc.(Printing Services/Wildlife Gallery), this small store is overflowing with Bob's absolutely amazing photographic works of art. Thanks so much, Bob and Candy, for remembering our chance meeting quite a few years ago, down in Fish Creek Park, and for your overly generous words about my own photography.
www.brandedvisuals.com/index.html
Thanks so much, Karel, for giving us a great morning! We really appreciate your passing on your knowledge to us. The same thanks go to Suzanne, the mushroom specialist in Calgary. Sandy, really appreciate the ride there and back!
Yesterday, 3 September 2016, was a fungi day, quite rewarding and definitely fun. Our leader and friend, Karel, is very knowledgeable about fungi and yesterday he took 14 of us (plus Karel's two beautiful Beagles) on a foray to West Bragg Creek, maybe an hour's drive west of the city. We had been here a few times before over the years, either looking for fungi or on botany outings.
Photographing our findings usually means that I am way at the back of the group or have fallen back with a friend or two. Consequently, the mushrooms have often already been plucked/cut by the time we catch up to the rest of the participants. I also miss a lot of what is being said about IDs and details. It would take far too long to write down the name of each find - each photo taken would have to be carefully numbered so that the right name could be attached and this would be such a hassle when out with a group. I'm really hoping that Karel will eventually send out an email with photos and IDs. If not, or till then, my photos will have to be just nameless 'pretty pictures' : ) If you look closely, you can see all the very thin 'threads' that are joining the stem (stipe) with the shiny cap. This mass of threads is called a veil. Not sure if this is Cortinarius mucosus, commonly known as the orange webcap or the slimy cortinarius. It does have the cobweb-like annulus that protects the developing gills.
I met up with friend, Sandy, at 8:15 am and she drove out to the meeting place. My drive from home was done with my windshield wipers on my new car working non-stop - was it raining? No, it had rained the day before - hail, too, on my gleaming new vehicle that I had only had for five days! I needed to clean the windshield, but, once again, I couldn't for the life of me figure out how to turn the wipers off. Amazes me how complicated the wiper options are!
Our morning walk started off by going across the small bridge, then part way up the hill and then bush-whacking our way through the forest. This walk, which ended around lunch time, was the main one, but we did stop at a small, gravel parking area a few minutes along the main road, to do a second walk to check for any different mushrooms. This extra walk has yielded a few beauties in past years. Perhaps the most interesting find was a very small twig that had several tiny, turquoise coloured fungi cups on it. The colour looks so out of place in a natural area. My photos of them didn't turn out very well, but I will eventually post one of them.
From here, a few of us stopped at the Cinnamon Spoon cafe in Bragg Creek for lunch. Always a most enjoyable way to finish any outing. Before we climbed into the car for our return drive to Calgary, Sandy and I wandered into the beautiful Art Gallery, owned and run by Bob and Candy Cook. Named Branded Visuals Inc.(Printing Services/Wildlife Gallery), this small store is overflowing with Bob's absolutely amazing photographic works of art. Thanks so much, Bob and Candy, for remembering our chance meeting quite a few years ago, down in Fish Creek Park, and for your overly generous words about my own photography.
www.brandedvisuals.com/index.html
Thanks so much, Karel, for giving us a great morning! We really appreciate your passing on your knowledge to us. The same thanks go to Suzanne, the mushroom specialist in Calgary. Sandy, really appreciate the ride there and back!
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