Honey Mushrooms / Armillaria mellea
Forgetmenot Pond, Kananaskis
Forgetmenot Pond
Beautiful Alberta - prairie, foothills and mountai…
Terrible photos - but it was a GRIZZLY : )
Bighorn curiosity
Grizzly & one of her two cubs
Hops / Humulus lupulus
Showing its age
Domesticated Helmeted Guineafowl / "Numida meleagr…
The sunflower droop
Bighorn Sheep female
Kananaskis 'winter'
Grizzly female (#152) and cubs
Wedge Pond in fading fall colours
Barrier Lake, Kananaskis
Bighorn Sheep
Kananaskis
Bighorn Sheep licking salt off the highway
Wedge Pond, Kananaskis
Mold on a fungus?
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Mushroom growing on a log
Yellow mushroom
Fungus
Mushroom cluster
Fungus
Large, white mushrooms
Mushrooms
Grizzly Bear sow - mother of two cubs
Happy Canadian Thanksgiving!
Sheep River Provincial Park
Bighorn Sheep female
Is this an Alfalfa Looper moth / Autographa califo…
Opal Range erosion in Kananaskis
The meadow, Kananaskis
Spectacular Kananaskis valley
Another drive-by shot in Kananaskis
Swans in the sunlight
Woodland at Rod's
Hooded False Morel / Gyromitra infula – poisonous
Buller Pond, Kananaskis
Bighorn Sheep, Kananaskis
Wedge Pond, Kananaskis, Alberta
Black Bear, Kananaskis
Bighorn Sheep / Ovis canadensis, Kananaskis
American Pika
Colours of fall
Garden flower
Spathiphyllum wallisii
Conservatory, Calgary Zoo
Brown Cup & Golden Pluteus / Pluteus chrysophlebiu…
Amanita muscaria, with insects (mosquitoes?)
A summer memory
Shaggy Mane / Inky Cap
A favourite view in Kananaskis
Late September in Kananaskis, 2019
Old cars in Kananaskis
September snow in Kananaskis
Tiny mushrooms on a rotting log
A favourite road
Kananaskis on a mixed-weather day
Shaggy Mane / Inky Cap
Orange False Dandelion
Old log cabin/barn seen through the trees
An unexpected find - Shaggy Manes / Inky caps
Fall colour in Kananaskis
A usual pose of an American Pika
A group of old beauties
Sunflower, against a pink barn
The last one remaining
Mushroom with guttation droplets - Soap Tricholoma…
The first day of fall
Not "The Sickener"
Shaggy parasol / Chlorophyllum (formerly Macrolepi…
Bolete
Shaggy parasol / Chlorophyllum (formerly Macrolepi…
Shaggy parasol / Chlorophyllum (formerly Macrolepi…
Highlight of my day - Fly agaric / Amanita muscari…
Fly agaric / Amanita muscaria
Mushroom growing on top of a tall tree stump
Our leader for fungi walks, Karel Bergmann
Puffballs and others growing on a tree stump
Fly agaric / Amanita muscaria
Amanita muscaria
Backlit Sunflower
Gaillardia
Bar U Ranch
Bolete
Cystoderma cinnabarina
Cystoderma cinnabarina
Pholiota terrestris growing in soil
Fungus
Coral fungus sp.
Pholiota destruens fungus on cut end of a log
Rural Alberta
Slime mold, Pringle Mt forest walk
Reflections in a log cabin window
1947 Mercury Pickup in front of Chop House, Bar U…
Old silo, south of the city
Bentley 1951 - my ride for a brief, wonderful mome…
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98 visits
Puffballs on a rotting log
This morning, it's back to posting more photos of fungi from our visit to Rod Handfield's acreage. Still more left to edit and post and I really must get these done. Sorry about the lack of IDs for so many of the fungi, but at least I have made a photo record of species seen.
On that day, 8 September 2019, we had such a wonderful four and a half hours, searching for different kinds of fungi in the amazing forest on Rod Handfield's land, SW of Calgary. I think this was our tenth visit - the first one I went on, being on 25 June 2009 - each one resulting in various different species. It was so overwhelming yesterday! You didn't know which direction to face and which mushroom to photograph first. They were everywhere! Such a contrast to our visit on 6 August 2017, when basically there were no mushrooms (other than maybe three), because everywhere had been so very dry.
A day like this can be so exhausting, not just from the walking, but also because of all the excitement. That night, I slept well. The quality of many of my photos is not the best, as the day was very overcast - the last thing one wants when trying to take photos deep in the forest. After leaving Rod's, it did rain. I had driven myself there instead of carpooling, so that I could drive some of the backroads in the area after we had finished. The forecast was for sun and cloud - and I had foolishly believed it. The rain put an end to my plans and I headed for home. I'm so glad I had checked a special little spot near Rod's first thing in the morning, when I got there a bit too early. A few years ago, there was a beautiful display of Fly Agaric / Amanita muscaria mushrooms growing there, but not since then. To my absolute delight, there were maybe half a dozen, in different stages of development. Surprisingly, we didn't come across a single one in Rod's forest this year.
As always, thank you so much, Rod, for so generously allowing us to explore your property. This has been my favourite place to visit for quite a number of years now. We greatly appreciate your kindness - you are always so welcoming, and we learn so much and discover so many beautiful things. Thank you, Karel, for leading the group and helping with some of the identifications. For the rest, "fungus" will have to be sufficient. As usual, any IDs given are always tentative, not 100% confirmed. Rule is, if you are not an expert in mycology, do not pick wild mushrooms to eat!
On that day, 8 September 2019, we had such a wonderful four and a half hours, searching for different kinds of fungi in the amazing forest on Rod Handfield's land, SW of Calgary. I think this was our tenth visit - the first one I went on, being on 25 June 2009 - each one resulting in various different species. It was so overwhelming yesterday! You didn't know which direction to face and which mushroom to photograph first. They were everywhere! Such a contrast to our visit on 6 August 2017, when basically there were no mushrooms (other than maybe three), because everywhere had been so very dry.
A day like this can be so exhausting, not just from the walking, but also because of all the excitement. That night, I slept well. The quality of many of my photos is not the best, as the day was very overcast - the last thing one wants when trying to take photos deep in the forest. After leaving Rod's, it did rain. I had driven myself there instead of carpooling, so that I could drive some of the backroads in the area after we had finished. The forecast was for sun and cloud - and I had foolishly believed it. The rain put an end to my plans and I headed for home. I'm so glad I had checked a special little spot near Rod's first thing in the morning, when I got there a bit too early. A few years ago, there was a beautiful display of Fly Agaric / Amanita muscaria mushrooms growing there, but not since then. To my absolute delight, there were maybe half a dozen, in different stages of development. Surprisingly, we didn't come across a single one in Rod's forest this year.
As always, thank you so much, Rod, for so generously allowing us to explore your property. This has been my favourite place to visit for quite a number of years now. We greatly appreciate your kindness - you are always so welcoming, and we learn so much and discover so many beautiful things. Thank you, Karel, for leading the group and helping with some of the identifications. For the rest, "fungus" will have to be sufficient. As usual, any IDs given are always tentative, not 100% confirmed. Rule is, if you are not an expert in mycology, do not pick wild mushrooms to eat!
Frans Schols has particularly liked this photo
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