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You’ve heard of elf cups? Well, this was more of an elf cauldron! So, if you go down to Cwm George wood tonight, be prepared to see a horde of partying, drunken elves.

21 Friday Jan 2022
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You’ve heard of elf cups? Well, this was more of an elf cauldron! So, if you go down to Cwm George wood tonight, be prepared to see a horde of partying, drunken elves.

14 Friday Jan 2022
Posted in fungi
Tags
Artillery fungus, British fungi, Cannonball fungus, Shooting star fungus, Shotgun fungus, Sphaerobolus stellatus
This was a first for me, an amazing cluster of fungi within inches of the Common bird’s nest fungi I blogged about yesterday. Variously named ‘Shooting star’, ‘Shotgun’, Artillery’ and ‘Cannonball’ fungus, Sphaerobolus stellatus gets its name from the way it shoots out its spores, apparently with a popping sound that you can actually hear and at a force that sends them flying up to 6 metres.

I haven’t been able to find a lot of information about this fungus except for the Wikipedia entry on the genus Sphaerobolus, which looks reliable and includes some of the more technical details of its eruptive system, if you’re interested in the nitty gritty. I’m planning to return when it’s drier for another look and to get better photos.
13 Thursday Jan 2022
Posted in fungi
I had planned a long walk along a local beach but unforecast hail and almost constant showers sent me stomping homeward sooner than expected, a little disappointed at not seeing many waterfowl. And then a splash of yellow on the ground caught my eye, a blob of Witch’s butter (Tremella mesenterica) on a small fallen branch. But, even better than the butter, my eye was drawn to this fabulous cluster of Common bird’s nest fungi (Crucibulum laeve), a species that’s more common than you might think but very easily overlooked because of its small size.

I’ve blogged about these fungi before (Bird’s-nests with eggs!, August 2017) – click on the link to see better photos, taken in dry weather, when the details of the nests and their eggs can be more clearly seen. And check out tomorrow’s post for some even more amazing fungi, lurking right next to these bird’s nests.

07 Friday Jan 2022
Posted in fungi
At first glance, I thought this was Turkey tail, a common bracket fungus that I’m sure most people are aware of.

But, when I looked more closely, particularly at the newest growth – those fat, juicy looking little buttons, and also at how furry some of the growth was, I knew my initial impression was wrong. This is Tripe fungus (Auricularia mesenterica).
I couldn’t tell what the wood was as the tree had been sawn off very close to the ground and only a very short section of trunk and some sections of exposed root remained (all of which were covered in fungal growth). But, Tripe fungus grows most commonly on Elm trees so I assume this was an English elm that had succumbed to Dutch elm disease.
26 Sunday Dec 2021
Posted in fungi, insects, lichen, wildflowers
This post is really an acknowledgment of my lack of knowledge – everything shown in the photos below remains unidentified, and these are just some photos I’ve kept. Most photos get deleted once I’ve spent a little time trying to put a name to their subject, but failed. It may sometimes seem as if I can put a name to most flora and fauna I see but that’s definitely not the case. And I’m okay with that. I don’t need to identify everything – in fact, unless I’m searching for something specific, it’s often much nicer simply to look and admire, be amazed and enjoy.
14 Tuesday Dec 2021
Posted in fungi
Time to add some fungi to this countdown. Earthstars would be too predictable so I’ve chosen instead to focus on some of the more common fungi that we all see when we’re out on our wanders: the inkcaps. They come in many shapes and sizes, grow in grass and dense woodland, are not always easy to identify, and are often to be found in a state of deliquescence (dissolving into black mush). Here’s a selection of this year’s finds.
03 Friday Dec 2021
Posted in fungi
Happy Fungi Friday!

I’m fairly sure these are Grey knights (Tricholoma terreum), though, as with many fungi, I’m not exactly sure of my identification and it can be difficult to separate the grey Tricholoma species. According to the First Nature website, Grey Knights are usually found in coniferous forests – mine were in a cemetery but there were several conifers growing nearby, and I know these fungi have been found at this cemetery previously.
26 Friday Nov 2021
It was the weak sunlight filtering through the almost-leafless overhead branches that drew my eyes to these fungi, their droplets of oozing liquid glinting as the light fell on them.

These are Alder brackets, Inonotus radiatus, a common species which, as you might expect from the name, is most often found on dead and dying Alder trees, though it does also grow on other species of hardwood trees.

According to the First Nature website, ‘Inonotus, the genus name of the Alder Bracket fungus, comes from ino– a prefix meaning fibrous, and ot which means an ear; the ending –us merely turns it into the form of a Latinised noun. The specific name radiatus comes from the Latin radi– meaning a ray, spoke or plate, and it is probably a reference to the radial wrinkles that are often evident on the upper surfaces of mature Alder Brackets.’

As you can see from my last photograph, these particular brackets were also home to several tiny larvae, perhaps of fungus gnats, though I can’t be sure of that.

19 Friday Nov 2021
The one in which we look at yellow stick-like fungi, poking up out of the ground, or wood.
Club fungi can be difficult to identify positively so I can’t be completely sure of my names here, though I have had some help from an expert. So, this first fungus, found in local deciduous woodland, is probably Handsome club (Clavulinopsis laeticolor).

This next club fungus looks superficially similar to the last but this one had sprouted in mossy grassland, meaning it is likely Yellow club (Clavulinopsis helvola).

And this third yellow stick-like fungus is paler, almost translucent and jelly-like, and was flourishing on decaying wood. I’m fairly sure this is Small stagshorn (Calocera cornea).
12 Friday Nov 2021
Tags
boletes, British fungi, cemetery fungi, Cortinarius, earthtongues, entoloma fungi, fungi at the cemetery, waxcaps
In recent weeks I’ve paid several visits to Cardiff’s Cathays Cemetery so today I thought I’d share a selection of some of the glorious fungi I’ve seen, including various species of bolete, entoloma and cortinarius, as well as waxcaps and earthtongues.
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