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Tony Croft aka hamadryad

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Everything posted by Tony Croft aka hamadryad

  1. Whilst I totaly agree with the mozaics point and biodiversity, these old growth woods are engines of that proscess, and are so important. simply replanting them is NOT going to work in the way we imagine.
  2. I am not sure abut the cuticularis, not quite right for me but a possible. daedaleopsis onfrogosa (what host) G applanatums are assured and I will elaborate in a mo last one Host? hard to say, pores like trametes with the gano, one can see the brown layers of the upper, and what the tree is saying is Im being white rotted with selective delignification, you can see my bulgewood formations, if my fungi was fommes I would be cracking longtitudinaly as the fommes follows my medulary rays:001_cool:
  3. not fommes sean, applanatums.
  4. [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uFRdy7o3DPE&list=PLD4625C557A777CFA&feature=plcp&context=C46d44dcFDvjVQa1PpcFOiETaZUeRUcDgqbRWygGLJiq1PzFCI_SA=]Julia Butterfly Dateline 2-14-99 - YouTube[/ame]
  5. This will be one of the best 44 minutes youll ever spend [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zc99ikb3KXY&list=PL919AAAC7C516CE0E&feature=plcp&context=C40e58f7FDvjVQa1PpcFOiETaZUeRUcEMxpvn3lsphVwp77c4SXyE=]Activism, Deep Ecology & the Gaian Era - Lynn Margulis, Stephen Buhner and John Seed - YouTube[/ame]
  6. it depends on your genetic origin westerners have consumed milk for millenia, wheras asians (chinese/japs and the like have never had that aspect of diet in the culture and hence most are lactose intolerant
  7. if dried i would imagine so
  8. Simple question, simple answer:thumbup: it may be squirells chewing out the soft rotten wood, many animals will do so in order to make a home in heartwood decayed trees:thumbup1: its only later that bats find it a home, they tend to be nomadic and oportunistic
  9. nature is shocking, there are many battles in the macro world that would be the subject of science fiction movies and horror! Im glad to be top of the food chain (mostly)
  10. all of em is special.
  11. NO:biggrin:
  12. tubby! right im going to work!
  13. thats rich coming from heath boy!
  14. thats because your going senile David, I WAS invited, and Look into the AT archives. I will leave you too it then:001_rolleyes: Cheeky sod:biggrin:
  15. I do hope we havnt got a case of hornet raid here
  16. that is a splendid tip!
  17. I will get a round in too:thumbup: be good to put a face to a name:thumbup:
  18. thanks for that Gerrit, must have missed that post:biggrin: I have found it also on acers of other varieties Platanoides/psuedoplatanus but never on campestre before. I found hispidus on platanoides too a few weeks back.
  19. and I think we do his outlook justice too:thumbup1:
  20. nice little book insert! I love the sentiment in the statments on the back.
  21. think were supposed to say lipsiense these days though, bad habits die hard!
  22. applanatum does like ash, nice shots
  23. glad you didnt take that comment the wrong way, I did understand the situation, just wantesd to as you say make the point. Ive been giving this some thought! dont like the jerky footage of the head cams though! does need to be done though, Im sure i can get it sorted soon! need to look into the cams first:thumbup1:
  24. cabin porn is a great name! Can I have this one please!
  25. thats interesting David:thumbup1: its funny ben asked me what associates with them before we found this, I said I dont see enough vetran maples to have a good handle yet but that P. squamosus is to be the expected norm. this seems logical too.

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