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Pictures for Pam, Day 80: Nature's Jewelry
Day 4, Silver argiope / Argiope argentata, Bishop…
Home garden-argiope-aurantia-DSC 6847
spider - man ...
Gotcha..!!
Heart-shaped Web
Another Garden Spider
Spider web
locomotive-spider
St Andrew's Cross spider underside
St Andrew's Cross spider
In the rain
Netz der Trichterspinne (3 xPiP)
Cobweb on Water Butt
11SH Camellia
barbed web
if the wire doesn't get you the web will
Watch where you walk!
Website
sparkling diamonds
foggy web
oaw[I] - spider and prey {1 of 3}
oaw[I] - spider and prey {2 of 3}
oaw[I] - spider and prey {3 of 3}
Spider's Web
Halloween House
Hoar frost
Thistle Flower And Seedhead.
O, what a tangled web
Packed Lunch (+PiP)
A Cluster of Baby Spiders
EOS 6D Peter Harriman 12 47 55 00759 BewitchingBus…
Spider's Web with Water Droplets
Pergola, fence and a spider's web
Spider trap resurrected for HFF
Translucent spider (16.05.2018)
Webbed
Caterpillars in Web
Dripping Fern.
Waterlogged!!
Nobody's Home
Spider
Garden Spider at work
Hairy legs
DSCN0802 (2)
Owl and spider webs
It's a trap!
Garden Spider
weaving ...
Toowoomba_FunnelWeb_0517_ 2232
Toowoomba_FunnelWeb_0517_ 2239
Web glow ...
Nature's Christmas Decorations
Climbing Spider
Website!
spider in the garden
Poised and ready
Spider Net
The tangled web
Hands Up! (2)
Looking after the larder
Cobweb
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A spider's creation
What??? Just checked our weather forecast and I found little snowflake icons for this coming Thursday, 13 September!! I am SO not ready for this. We did get snow in the mountains back in August.
Yesterday, 8 September 2018, there was a second Fungi Foray out at West Bragg Creek. A handful of us from Calgary were there, plus so many people who belong to a mycological group. Many of them arrived armed with the dreaded baskets! Never a good sign, as that means mushrooms will be picked before those of us who are photographers and/or like to see mushrooms left where they are growing, get a chance to take photos.
This year is not a particularly good year for mushrooms and other fungi. However, we did see quite a few different kinds, including this little family growing along the edge of a tree stump. As always, any IDs given are only tentative - have no ID for these. This little grouping was not in West Brragg Creek itself, but in a "secret" spot. Three of us went there after the foray. A treacherous place to try and walk, but a few different species can be found there. Definitely not a place for dozens of people.
One of the things we wanted to check out in this second spot was a log that was covered in Blue Stain. On our last visit, we had photographed a white mushroom and when I got home, I noticed that the log below it had Blue Stain. We wanted to check if we could find any of the beautiful and unusual turquise fungi cups were to be seen. When we eventually found the right log in the forest (ha, ha!), we were delighted to see that there was a scattering of these teeny cups. Almost all of them were very pale, but some did have a turquoise rim. Will eventually post a photo of them.
The weather was just perfect for our morning's walk. On the drive west of the city to West Bragg Creek, there was a beautiful Chinook Arch. I just had to pull over on the highway and take a quick shot through the windscreen. It was so tempting to keep driving further into the mountains - West Bragg Creek is right on the edge.
Yesterday, 8 September 2018, there was a second Fungi Foray out at West Bragg Creek. A handful of us from Calgary were there, plus so many people who belong to a mycological group. Many of them arrived armed with the dreaded baskets! Never a good sign, as that means mushrooms will be picked before those of us who are photographers and/or like to see mushrooms left where they are growing, get a chance to take photos.
This year is not a particularly good year for mushrooms and other fungi. However, we did see quite a few different kinds, including this little family growing along the edge of a tree stump. As always, any IDs given are only tentative - have no ID for these. This little grouping was not in West Brragg Creek itself, but in a "secret" spot. Three of us went there after the foray. A treacherous place to try and walk, but a few different species can be found there. Definitely not a place for dozens of people.
One of the things we wanted to check out in this second spot was a log that was covered in Blue Stain. On our last visit, we had photographed a white mushroom and when I got home, I noticed that the log below it had Blue Stain. We wanted to check if we could find any of the beautiful and unusual turquise fungi cups were to be seen. When we eventually found the right log in the forest (ha, ha!), we were delighted to see that there was a scattering of these teeny cups. Almost all of them were very pale, but some did have a turquoise rim. Will eventually post a photo of them.
The weather was just perfect for our morning's walk. On the drive west of the city to West Bragg Creek, there was a beautiful Chinook Arch. I just had to pull over on the highway and take a quick shot through the windscreen. It was so tempting to keep driving further into the mountains - West Bragg Creek is right on the edge.
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