Tuesday, 30 September 2025

Dene Park to the SW of Hunters' Lodge

 

I checked the car-park Pine Log for the developing fruiting body, and found a previously unseen white bracket which apps said were a Postia, So it ought to be Postia stiptica or Postia tephraleuca.



Just before I reached the frontage of Hunters Lodge, two fruiting bodies of what I thought might have been Caloboletus radicans, close to a semi-mature oak on the edge of the wood - it certainly tasted bitter, no red layer below the pileus as in C. and not as red-tinged as in C. calopus found with Beech and conifers (occasionally Oak), so the commonest option seems to be the most likely as so often happens. 







However, there does seem to be an issue with the red reticulum on the stem. Although there are plenty of images like this claiming to be the Rooting Bolete online, it does need checking against the other group of boletes in case there is an error here.


In the wood section to the NW of Hunters Lodge there were 3 or more Parasols, Macrolepiota procera, under the Yews if under any particular trees at all, but surrounded by Oak, Hornbeam and near Common Laurel. 




On a couple of logs there were multiple creamy partly zonate brackets with somewhat lumpy and a bumpy hairy upper surfaces and very long mazelike pores on the underside, so at first I thought possibly Trametes gibbosa, the Lumpy Bracket itself. I didn't think it was the Blushing Bracket, because it was not on Willow, was not zonate enough, and didn't blush (admittedly it was old though). Also not the Oak Mazegill, because not on Oak, not with the characteristic deep belly of the Daedalea and the pores just didn't look right. But still to be proven I believe! The underside was actually gill-like enough to suggest Birch Mazegill, Lenzites (now Trametes again?) betulinus! And that I am now nearly sure is what it is! The fallen trunk was most likely Sycamore or Horse Chestnut, but apparently that is still just possible. 

Interesting rounded particles of "debris". I certainly need to come back to this one!


The characteristic underside, under room and phone lights together, so a little bit yellow



By the side of the gravelled drive two Shaggy Inkcaps, Coprinus comatus, were rushing through their brief existences  





By the gateway a couple of Common Puffballs, Lycoperdon



Outside the wood in the grassland to the north of the car park, there were about 5 nice Blushers, Amanita rubescens.



And also two nice chunky salmon-coloured Russulas! Sadly not identified.























Sunday, 21 September 2025

Arrival at Shortflatt

On several of the older Ash trees there appeared to be some examples of very old Hairy Bracket fruiting bodies, one high on one tree, one down at the bottom of another. Very difficult to ID of course at that stage of decay.

At the bottom of a beefy substantial Beech Tree alongside the main driveway into the venue there were fruiting fronds of the Giant Polypore, Meripulus giganteus, which were already blackening.


In the fields a significantly sized . Also a lovely Brown Hare, showing off it's paces.

Thursday, 18 September 2025

Tomich driveway on arrival.

Old rotting fruiting bodies, a small cluster of the dark Honey Fungus, Armillaria ostoyae, then a group of The Miller, Clitopilus prunulus then many many Chanterelles, Cantharellus cibarius. Down the drive also dozens of Brown Roll Rims, Paxillus involutus, a couple of Birch Brown Boletes, Leccinum scabrum, and some massive Ugly Milk caps, Lactarius or Lactifluus controversus. Some other lbms.

Saturday, 9 August 2025

Oldbury Wood in The Dry

 

The Smoky Bracket, Bjerkandera adusta or fumosa on a stump/post by the car park drive


Old brackets of the Oak Curtain Bracket, Hymenochaete rubiginosa, on the end of an old decaying oak log




Wednesday, 30 July 2025

Dunorlan Park with some Boletes

 

An afternoon wander around Dunorlan in the hope of finding the Podoscypha multizonata fruiting bodies, one of which I saw in 2025, but nothing visible yet this year. 

However it was great to find what appeared to be my very first Ganoderma resinaceum, on the old struggling Oak by the Halls Hole Road car park.  









 

Sunday, 22 June 2025

 Possibly Harmandiola tremulae, one of the many gall midges in Cecidomyidae, on one of the "corner" Aspens by the first junction beyond the dog bin. 

Two of these species form an ID pair, on the upperside and not projecting much below the lamina, H. tremulae the bigger, more globular with thicker walls, shiny red when mature and H. globuli, smaller, thicker necked sometime with a collar, and duller when mature. The larva of H. tremulae is a somewhat redder orange.



Note: sphericality, w.r.t. H. globuli

There seem to be more reports of this species by the smaller and less spectacular Harmandiola globuli. Perhaps those are just less often spotted. 

I get the impression that H. tremulae is more commonly found towards the base of the leaf, nearer the junction with the petiole. Perhaps this is less true of H. globuli.

About 3 - 4 mm across, a shiny red when mature, then blackening. 

Tuesday, 21 January 2025

The crimped Gill, Plicatura crispa

A lovely spread of brackets by the side of MR 597, possibly on fallen Hazel, Corylus. The blue-grey tinges on the underside of the brackets are obvious from a distance. This species has exploded across the UK since the turn of the century, and no-one seems to know why.


Fruit bodies are generally 1-3 cm in length with bracket-like semi-circular shell shapes. Upper surface is normally concentrically zoned getting paler as it approaches the edge. Underside is made up of pale forked folds, giving a gill-like appearance. It produces white spores.

Plicatura crispa is an effective participant in the initial phase of decay, colonizing predominantly dead branches of deciduous trees (Fagus and Betula) and is associated with a white rot. A few years into the succession of wood decomposition, strong competitors such as Trametes versicolor and the split-gill fungus Schizophyllum commune often displace Plicatura crispa.

It is the ridged margins, rather like the edge of a pie, that accounts for the species’ common name of the Crimped Gill, as well as the second part of its binomial: crispa is the Latin word for curly or crimped (there’s another fungus, the Wood Cauliflower, with the scientific name Sparassis crispa).