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Tis the season to see Fungi, fa la la la la....


David Humphries

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The photos were taken by one of my colleagues while out and about and spotted on various trees. Although one shot looks to be inonotus. What do you guys think the more lenticular darker brown bracket is? To me it doesn't look so much like Hispidus. Although I'm scouring the arbtalk fungi android app now :-D

 

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The photos were taken by one of my colleagues while out and about and spotted on various trees. Although one shot looks to be inonotus. What do you guys think the more lenticular darker brown bracket is? To me it doesn't look so much like Hispidus. Although I'm scouring the arbtalk fungi android app now :-D

 

Sent from my MB860 using Tapatalk 2

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The photos were taken by one of my colleagues while out and about and spotted on various trees. Although one shot looks to be inonotus. What do you guys think the more lenticular darker brown bracket is? To me it doesn't look so much like Hispidus. Although I'm scouring the arbtalk fungi android app now :-D 2

 

as Tony eluded to above, these all appear to be Inonotus hispidus in varying stages of development and desiccation.

 

 

.

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The photos were taken by one of my colleagues while out and about and spotted on various trees. Although one shot looks to be inonotus. What do you guys think the more lenticular darker brown bracket is? To me it doesn't look so much like Hispidus. Although I'm scouring the arbtalk fungi android app now :-D 2

 

as Tony eluded to above, these all appear to be Inonotus hispidus in varying stages of development and desiccation.

 

 

.

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I havent asked before because i am only just finishing the survey format:thumbup1:

 

There is going to be so many trees to get data from but the more I do the more robust the work is, Im planning on 1000 as a minimum! hoping for 5k!

 

The tricky bit will be getting Picus for a sample batch of around 100 trees.

 

Make sure you get to the big old beech at Frishden if you ever get there, she is one to see, and others of special calibre close by. this is one of the most Laetiporus colonised beech groups ive encountered, and well worth visiting just to get a good feel of the difference in diffuse versus ring porus/heartwooded trees

 

Give me a shout if you need a hand for data or anything. Glad to help!

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I havent asked before because i am only just finishing the survey format:thumbup1:

 

There is going to be so many trees to get data from but the more I do the more robust the work is, Im planning on 1000 as a minimum! hoping for 5k!

 

The tricky bit will be getting Picus for a sample batch of around 100 trees.

 

Make sure you get to the big old beech at Frishden if you ever get there, she is one to see, and others of special calibre close by. this is one of the most Laetiporus colonised beech groups ive encountered, and well worth visiting just to get a good feel of the difference in diffuse versus ring porus/heartwooded trees

 

Give me a shout if you need a hand for data or anything. Glad to help!

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I noticed a little bulb one month ago at the base of this oak, here it is with a fine addition of an unexpected Leati. The bulb turned out to be a little resinaceum.

The owners were a breath of fresh air. After coming out to make sure I wasnt damaging their 'pretty mushrooms' I left happy to have chatted and they were happy to know what they where :thumbup: I'm suprised the chicken hadnt been knocked off as the road is used as a school run!

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I noticed a little bulb one month ago at the base of this oak, here it is with a fine addition of an unexpected Leati. The bulb turned out to be a little resinaceum.

The owners were a breath of fresh air. After coming out to make sure I wasnt damaging their 'pretty mushrooms' I left happy to have chatted and they were happy to know what they where :thumbup: I'm suprised the chicken hadnt been knocked off as the road is used as a school run!

 

Nice shots.

 

Do you pass this tree often?

 

Could you get a shot of it when the leaves are gone?

 

 

 

 

.

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