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~ a celebration of nature

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Category Archives: parks

Fungi Friday: Not just a park bench

25 Friday Nov 2016

Posted by sconzani in fungi, nature, parks

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Dacryomyces stillatus, Orange Jelly fungus, park bench, Tremella mesenterica, Yellow Brain Fungus

This looks like an ordinary park bench, right?

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But, if you look closer …

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No, closer …

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Then you will see that, even here, on a presumably treated and processed and painted (or stained) piece of wood, fungi are active.

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The bright orange blobs are the aptly named Orange Jelly fungus (Dacryomyces stillatus) and the washed-out yellow blobs are probably Yellow Brain Fungus (Tremella mesenterica) – I say probably because there’s another fungus that looks a lot like this one, Tremella aurantia, but it’s parasitic on a third fungus, Hairy Curtain crust (Stereum Hirsutum), which does not appear to be present here – but who knows what’s lurking inside the wood?

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Autumn in Cardiff: Bute Park

20 Sunday Nov 2016

Posted by sconzani in autumn, nature, parks, trees

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

autumn colour, autumn leaves, Bute Park, Cardiff, River Taff

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Bute Park is, well, beaut! Cardiff’s green heart has wilderness and playing fields; cycling tracks and walking paths; a stone circle; an ambling canal on one side and a roaring river on the other; grand avenues of ginkgoes and limes, and a botanical treasury of trees. Though some of my photos were taken 10 days ago, on a bright blue-sky day, the majority were taken during this afternoon’s long ramble hither and yon. Luckily, winter’s first official storm, Angus, which blasted the city with rain, hail and high winds over the past couple of days, hadn’t blown away all the splendid autumn hues but I fear this may be my last autumn post for this year … so, enjoy!

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Autumn in Cardiff: Heath Park

15 Tuesday Nov 2016

Posted by sconzani in autumn, nature, parks, trees

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

autumn colour, autumn leaves, Cardiff, crunching leaves, Heath Park

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I’ve blogged about Heath Park before: 37 hectares of fields, woodland, a stream and two ponds, lots of biodiversity and one of my favourite places for invertebrates during the summer and fungi over the winter months. And, right now, its trees are painting the park red and orange and gold. It’s another stunning place to soak in these stunning autumn hues and crunch a leaf or two!

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Autumn in Cardiff: Roath Park

13 Sunday Nov 2016

Posted by sconzani in autumn, nature, parks, trees

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

autumn colour, autumn leaves, Cardiff, Roath Park

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We are having such a spectacular autumn here in Cardiff that I feel the need to share some of the stunning colour I’m seeing in my almost-daily walks in my local parks. I chose well when I found a flat across the road from Roath Park – or, at least, part of it, the recreation grounds, a large grassy area of playing fields. There are also pleasure gardens, a botanical and rose garden, a large lake, and an area called the wild gardens. The park contains a huge variety of trees, both native and exotic, so the colour at this time of year is just magical.

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One year, one month, one day

24 Monday Oct 2016

Posted by sconzani in autumn, nature, parks, seasons, trees

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

Bute Park, River Taff

I enjoyed a lovely long meander around Cardiff’s Bute Park on the weekend, strolled the riverside paths, strode along the towering lime avenue, and scuffed through the occasional deep drift of autumn leaves. It was magical! I took a ton of photos, as I always do, and when I was editing them later that evening, I realised I had one scene that was almost a perfect fit for an image I took last year. In fact, it was exactly one year, one month and one day ago. These are those two images, the oldest first.

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¡Hola, Hoatzin!

12 Wednesday Oct 2016

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, parks

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Hoatzin, Machu Wasi Lake, Manu National Park, Opisthocomidae, Opisthocomus hoazin, Peruvian Amazon, stinkbird

This is one of the world’s weirdest birds. In fact, it’s unique. In taxonomic terms, it has its own family, the Opisthocomidae, its own suborder, the Opisthocomi, and its own genus, Opisthocomus. This is Opisthocomus hoazin, common name Hoatzin, also known as the stinkbird. In 2015, examination of its DNA proved that the Hoatzin is the last surviving bird of a line that branched off from the avian family tree around the time of the extinction of the dinosaurs, 65 million years ago.

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My encounter with these incredible birds happened during the eighteen months I lived in Peru. In August 2011, I took advantage of an extra-long holiday weekend to take a trip to the Peruvian Amazon in the Manu National Park. As our guide Abraham poled us slowly around Machu Wasi Lake on a wooden raft, these primitive creatures made evil hissing noises when we approached their perches in the trees surrounding the lake. Abraham explained that the Hoatzin have prehistoric-looking claws on their wings to help them scramble amongst the branches, and they’re called stinkbirds because they have a digestive system unique among birds: they ruminate like cows and use the bad smell that this process creates to scare away their enemies. I’m glad we didn’t get too close but it was certainly an incredible encounter with one of Nature’s little miracles.

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The fungus that looks like porcelain

10 Monday Oct 2016

Posted by sconzani in autumn, fungi, nature, parks, trees

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

beech trees, fungus, Heath Park, Oudemansiella mucida, Porcelain Fungus, strobilurins

I saw my very first Oudemansiella mucida, the Porcelain Fungus, last Friday, during a wander around Cardiff’s Heath Park and knew at once what it was. Such immediacy of identification does not happen often in the world of the fungi fanciers so this was a rare and much-valued moment. But this is one fungus that is easy to recognise.

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Firstly, it lives exclusively on beech, and I have been keeping a close watch on a huge old beech tree that came down in a big storm last winter, which, much to their credit, was sawn into huge chunks and left at the woodland edge by Cardiff Council staff. The beech is now providing a home to many small creatures, not just to fungi. Secondly, it is a clean, almost translucent white, like my granny’s tea cups used to be, and its caps are frequently covered in a thin layer of slime (hence the second part of their scientific name: mucida refers to this transparent mucus). That’s not as revolting as it sounds – the shiny surface makes these little beauties shimmer in the sunshine.

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Interestingly, this fungus produces chemicals called strobilurins, which have anti-fungal properties. The Porcelain Fungus uses them to inhibit and even attack opposition fungi in order to protect its territory but scientists have refined these same chemicals to produce anti-fungal agents that can protect crops from fungal attacks. Like so many fungi, the Porcelain fungus is beautiful and utile.

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Bioblitzing at Porthkerry Country Park

06 Thursday Oct 2016

Posted by sconzani in nature, parks

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

bioblitz, biodiversity, biological recording, biological recording centre, biological records, Mary Gillham Archive Project, Porthkerry Country Park, SEWBReC

As I volunteer on the Mary Gillham Archive Project, which is hosted by SEWBReC (the South East Wales Biodiversity Records Centre), I got invited along to SEWBReC’s staff outing yesterday. And what do records centre staff do for a staff outing? Why we go looking for more biodiversity records, of course! I was in my element, and it was so nice being with like-minded people who also spend a lot of time standing and staring at bushes and trees, and can take an hour to progress a hundred metres. For once, I wasn’t the ‘strange’ one!
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We spent the morning by the seaside at Porthkerry Country Park, on the south Wales coast near Barry, a first visit for me to this beautiful place, which ‘contains 220 acres of woodland and meadows in a sheltered valley that leads to a pebble beach and spectacular cliffs’. We barely scratched the surface, so I will certainly be heading back to explore further. Our list of species found currently stands at 93 but we have a few more to check so I feel sure we’ll push our total over the 100 mark before we’re finished. The sun shone on the recording team at Porthkerry!

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Pink flamingos

14 Wednesday Sep 2016

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, parks

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Andean altiplano, Andean flamingo, Bolivia, Chilean flamingo, flamingo, James's flamingo, Laguna Colorada, pink flamingo, Red Lake, Reserva Nacional de Fauna Andina Eduardo Avaroa

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If you ever get the chance, you absolutely must visit the Reserva Nacional de Fauna Andina Eduardo Avaroa in south-western Bolivia, a massive 1.7-million-acre reserve full of active volcanoes, thermal springs, erupting geysers, huge lakes and, incredibly, three species of flamingos (the Andean, Chilean and, one of the world’s rarest, the James’s flamingo).

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The lakes are breathtakingly beautiful, not only because of their remote mountainous settings but also because of their colours, a result of the chemicals associated with the region’s volcanic activity. In the winter months it is very cold in this part of the Andean Altiplano, with temperatures frequently in the minus twenties and thirties. It seems incredible that flamingos could survive such extreme cold but, apparently, they have the ability to control their heartbeat, to allow themselves to sleep in the chilly water to try to avoid their enemies, the fox and the puma. However, when it’s extremely cold and the water has frozen, the flamingos can become trapped and are then almost literally sitting ducks.

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At 4300 metres above sea level and with an area of 60km2, Laguna Colorada, or Red Lake, really is red. This is due in part to the volcanic minerals and sediments it contains and also because of the microscopic algae that thrive in its waters. The lake is shallow, only 30 to 50cm deep, which makes it the perfect habitat for flamingos. And, except for the grey and white juveniles, the plumage of these flamingos is more reddish than normal because of the algae in the lagoon – these really are pink flamingos!

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A Fungi-ful Friday

11 Sunday Sep 2016

Posted by sconzani in fungi, nature, parks

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Cefn On, fungi foray, fungus

Fifty shades of brown, a soupçon of purple and a smattering of red – that about sums up my Friday fungi foray around Cefn On, one of my local Cardiff parks. A friend had posted a few finds from his walk there the previous day on the Glamorgan Fungi page on Facebook so it looked like a sure bet and, although I get the train up there, it’s a nice long walk back through Coed-y-Felin woods, around Llanishen Reservoir, through Nant Fawr woodland and alongside Roath Lake – about 7 miles all up but almost entirely through woods, parks and green places, so perfect!
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After the recent rains and with temperatures still warm during the day but dropping now overnight, Cefn On was alive with fungi and I got lots of photographs. Unfortunately, fungi are notoriously difficult to identify. What does it smell like? What colour are the spores? How big / small / wide / tall was it? Was it slimy or dry? Where was it growing? These are just a few of the questions you need to ask. I do try to work out what I have found but some things are only identifiable through microscopic analysis so, these days, I mostly just enjoy looking at them and admiring their multitude of shapes and forms and habits and colours.

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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