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Posted
2 hours ago, youngsbury said:

Came across these today on a beast of a beech ! Anything to worry about. 

D20F68AC-9F81-4D5C-BC3D-B9B4A7958223.jpeg

AAB957CB-C6ED-489A-A6DE-037C5D9413B0.jpeg

30064F09-FF43-42D2-9289-EFB87956205B.jpeg

7BA23FA8-D00E-4FA1-8143-4DFF3C745C63.jpeg

Run for your life ! 😁

 

Meripilus giganteus, (giant polypore) 

What you’re looking at are just the fruiting bodies of the fungus.

By themselves, not what the focus needs to be on,

 

Condition of the crown foliage.

Soil health.

Exposure to wind load .

Level of occupancy around that tree in terms of target. 
site management protocols in terms of access around the tree during significant weather events. 


The above are some of the issues that should be considered before a saw is put to use. 

  • Like 1
Posted

Thanks for the info ! It’s in parkland although a footpath is 100m away from any landing zone ! It looks healthy ! No deadwood in the crown and full of leaf. Possible compaction of soil on one side due to point of access into another field. 

Posted
1 hour ago, organic guy said:

IMG-20220916-WA0003.thumb.jpg.7da26b66d602a5d074770952693c4056.jpgSon found this yesterday, he made an identification, would love confirmation.

Do you have any more pics, one of the top of the cap?

 

It could be a slender parasol but I'm always wary of white gilled fungi if I'm considering doing anything with them.

 

WWW.WILDFOODUK.COM

A fairly common, tasty mushroom on alkali soils in grassland, woodland and even occasionally on sand dunes.

 

 

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