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Posted (edited)

Love the second shot Chris, good job they weren't goats though, they tend to make a meal out of tree buttresses :thumbdown:

 

 

Last time I looked at the relationship between veteran trees and lambs, one ended up on our dinner table :eating::biggrin:

 

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Edited by David Humphries

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Posted

Baphomet doesn't have the head of a goat for no reason!

 

Is that goat by the entrance we drove through? That avenue of horse chestnuts, some with Rigidoporus? I perhaps recognise that new fence being where you said there was a cluster of Coprinus feasting on a newly-severed root.

Posted

Beech that was in decline which has long term colonisation by Merripilus giganteus, the giant polypore.

Secondary saprophytes like the Trametes at the top of the reduced stem have led to decay conditions conducive to feeding and nesting birds.

 

 

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Posted

 

 

Last time I looked at the relationship between veteran trees and lambs, one ended up on our dinner table :eating::biggrin:

 

[ATTACH]202963[/ATTACH]

[ATTACH]202964[/ATTACH]

[ATTACH]202965[/ATTACH].

 

 

I'm sure it had a good life prior to that but I'm shocked that you take such obvious delight in the fact Mr Humphrie's! Looks bloody good though.:001_smile:

  • 3 weeks later...
  • 1 month later...
Posted

Long term colonisation of this oak wound by Daedalea quercina.

 

I nipped up and took these shots back in 2010

 

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Here it is 6 years on and the brown rot in the wood has only just recently allowed the incursion by tree nesters.

 

 

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