This is one of the common bark lichens we found, Parmelia sulcata, with its exuberant soralia developed from pseudocyphellae obviously in the centre of the thallus, its lovely grey lobes, brown to black on the undersurface.
This I think is a Physcia species, with the narrow lobes, in this case growing on wood, the hand-rail of a footbridge between the central pond and the marsh with the duckboard path. I think it is quite likely to be Physcia tenella, but I couldn't see any developed apothecia, or indeed any of the tiny black spots or pycnidia that you often see in pictures. The cilia on the edges of the lobes are quite visible, so it could perhaps be P. adscencens or P. tenella.
In the more established part of the lichen, the soredia make it look much more fuzzy.
This is an interesting photo of another section of the bridge timbers, with a grey foliose lichen with pseudocyphellae on the lobe to the bottom left of the photo. There are also some tiny black pimples on a surface in front, on the other section of timber.
Here are three different lichens on the top surface of the main bridge timber rail:
Evernia prunastri on an oak or willow perhaps
Usnea?
Grey lichen with black jam tart apothecia, perhaps Lecidella elaeochroma (Ach.) M.Choisy, slightly overgrown by a Physcia species, and with some limited black margins to be seen.
This is the white paint lichen, Phlyctis argena, on one of the trees along the driveway into Great Comp garden. In this instance I couldn't see see soredia (the usual description is soredia abundant or rare) or any apothecia (usual description is rare, but if found they should be dark grey, pruinose, with large muriform spores).
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