25 April 2015

Autumn, and the orange pore fungus appears


The orange pore fungus, Favolaschia calocera, has appeared along the No. 1 Line track. These small, striking fungi were nowhere to be seen when I climbed the track a little over a week ago; now, they're abundant in a tangle of fallen branches beside the track. No doubt other patches will appear elsewhere over the coming weeks.



All content © 2015 Pete McGregor

7 comments:

  1. This looks to me like a big party, with the little ones on the fringes, and the adults yakking and yucking it up. I see some have been stationary long enough, though, to serve as anchors for some industrious spiders. Love it.

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  2. Beautiful - a scene of great activity.

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  3. Fungi do have a "just add water" instantness to them. And they look like candies. The kind I wouldn't want to eat even if they *were* sugary. Like Circus Peanuts. Still, pretty.

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  4. Thanks for identifying these for me! I photographed some in Dean's Bush last Wednesday. Yours is much the better photograph though - closer in and showing more detail. They're very small, but in their mass on a dark-green dead branch, they brightened up the forest floor.

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  5. They do look as if there should be noise and movement here - like a party turned to stone under the spell of the white witch in the Narnia books!

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  6. Kia ora Pete,
    Stunning. How much there is to see, and so much happening within just a few of our footsteps. Amazing.
    Robb

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  7. Lesley, you're right — individually they don't have the same impact.

    Lisa — or like a party in Moominvalley :-)

    Kia ora Robb. Yes — so much to see. Sometimes it takes me a long time to get not very far along the No. 1 Line track ;-)

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