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A day of fungi

PostPosted: Mon 08 Apr, 2013 11:53 am
by iandsmith
Sorry to mention this to you Taswegians who've been having a bit of a non-rain event but it's been bucketting down here on the north coast of N.S.W. First day it didn't rain my partner Lorraine and I decided to head to Dorrigo NP to get some fungi shots. Didn't do as well as expected with the camera (I never do) but thought some of you might be interested in some of the shots we took.
At one spot we came upon a tree that I swear had over 1,000 fungi on it. I've never seen anything so prolific.
Cheers, Ian

Re: A day of fungi

PostPosted: Mon 08 Apr, 2013 5:54 pm
by Clusterpod
Lovely photos. We are eagerly awaiting the now (very) late, early-Autumn rains here in the west, so as to explore the Darling Range fungi.

Re: A day of fungi

PostPosted: Tue 09 Apr, 2013 9:02 am
by taswegian
yes, very nice.
Love that light coming through them in No 2.

Sure is dry here. Best I have seen were some frizzled and black fungi that had appeared but wilted quickly.
Even our paddock mushrooms pop through then wilt.

Re: A day of fungi

PostPosted: Tue 09 Apr, 2013 2:31 pm
by Clusterpod
Dry dry dry here but still some fungi to be found.
Perhaps Scarlet bracket fungus, Pycnoporus coccineus
Image

and a perennial fungi. Perhaps Phellinus robustusIt adds another layer each year until it exhausts its food supply. I hear of some dozens of years old.
Image

Re: A day of fungi

PostPosted: Thu 27 Jun, 2013 3:34 pm
by mrOtway[GoGoWalking]
Great Pics; colours, lights. Fungi can be so prolific at times. In the rainforests of the Otways (Great Ocean Road) normally the best time is mid Autumn, but much later this year. Cheers.

Re: A day of fungi

PostPosted: Sat 20 Jul, 2013 8:12 am
by Lorraine
Lovely pics. Funny how fungi can make you lie on the forest floor, climb over huge fallen timber, scratch your way up steep slopes or take risks down embankments. Some fungi are small and shiny, making you wonder about the truth of fairies. others can be humongous and so ugly. They are all worth adding to your library. I recently spent a whole day with Ken Smith, a free motion sewing machine embroiderer. It took me all day to produce three little fungi specimen on my machine. I think chasing the real thing in the forest and capturing an image a far easier option, so I will keep looking.

Re: A day of fungi

PostPosted: Sat 20 Jul, 2013 5:56 pm
by Davo1
Hasn't been a total loss down south Ian.......

Re: A day of fungi

PostPosted: Sun 21 Jul, 2013 10:17 am
by iandsmith
Wow, loved the blue fungi. Where was that shot?
Got a couple of ones new to me recently as well, photos included.

Re: A day of fungi

PostPosted: Sun 21 Jul, 2013 1:06 pm
by Clusterpod
Beautiful shots all!

If you weren't aware, fungimap has done an update on their site. Info to ID your photos is easier to find.

https://www.fungimap.org.au/

Re: A day of fungi

PostPosted: Mon 22 Jul, 2013 6:54 am
by akl168
Hope you don't mind me adding to this thread. Between bouts of wild wind and rain here in Melbourne, we dashed out to Churchill National Park for a quick walk yesterday and came across these.

Re: A day of fungi

PostPosted: Mon 22 Jul, 2013 9:38 am
by Clusterpod
Very nice. What a burster!

I think its Suillus sp. a Boletales

Re: A day of fungi

PostPosted: Tue 23 Jul, 2013 8:06 am
by Davo1
Sorry Ian, I did reply but it didn't show for some reason.
The blue one was at Lemonthyme on the secret falls walk.
They have been quite prolific this year, in comparison to recent years.
This year has turned out to be the best since 2009, it was just later than usual.
Cheers