Spider's tunnel web
Slime mold
The hiding game
Prostrate Knotweed / Polygonum aviculare
Blue Lettuce / Lactuca tatarica
Comb Tooth / Hericium coralloides
Stink Bug
Eyelash fungus
River Beauty
Like polished leather
Dead Leaf Butterfly
Teeny splash of purple
Heaven on earth
A mix of colours
Bluer than the sky
Bow Valley Provincial Park
Poppy red
Little blue spider
Shrubby Cinquefoil
Alone
Greens on green
Is this a Shield Bug?
Upright Prairie Coneflower / Ratibida columnifera…
This little light of mine ...
Louisiana Broomrape / Orobanche ludoviciana
Horseshoe Canyon
Not just a pretty seedpod
Rattlesnake Plantain Orchid / Goodyera repens
Slime mold
Saddle fungus
Bronzebells
Not a fungus, or a bird, or a flower ...
Little beauty
Dotted Blazingstar
Blurry, but fascinating
Ladybug on Goat's-beard
Puffball
Scarlet Butterfly Weed / Gaura coccinea
Naked Mitrewort / Mitella nuda
Spectacular
Northern Gentian
Bokeh paradise
Spores on moss capsules
Black Cup Fungus / Plectania melastoma
The Sickener / Russula emetica
Location
Lat, Lng:
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
140 visits
Blue


This was the very last fungus that I found and photographed on my walk at Brown-Lowery Provincial Park yesterday afternoon. Maybe an inch and a quarter wide and growing on top of a fallen log. No gills, so presumably a Polypore? Hardly a photogenic fungus to be found in the park. Not sure if there had been heavy rain/hail (like we had had recently in the city) or whether mushroom season is winding down (after only what, maybe three or four weeks!!!!!). Also, a family passed me on the path, and Mom and Dad were both carrying a bag of "something", I suspect, mushrooms! No idea what language they were speaking (European?), but I really felt like asking if that's what they had. After all, you are not allowed to remove anything from a Provincial Park and, secondly, you just don't do that when Anne is coming with her camera, LOL! However, some people do collect mushrooms to eat and in vast quantities - last summer on one outing, several of us were talking with a family who had spread out piles of wild mushrooms including, if I remember correctly, coral fungi. The mushrooms I did see yesterday were almost all well past their prime and the path had many that looked like they had been placed on the path and stomped on till disintegrated. Never seen this before. Came home with few photos and feeling "down". After all, this is "supposed" to be the peak of fungi season : ) Yikes!
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.