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Tony Croft aka hamadryad

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Everything posted by Tony Croft aka hamadryad

  1. A most excellent heads up Mr Humphries, havent been keeping up to date with the BMS of late, shame on me, thanks for the kick.
  2. as david said, nice shots too
  3. didnt know it was coming tillit was on top of her! lucky woman! obviously not her time and lots of good Karma!
  4. that is a very fine sample, rare to reach that stage of desiccation intact:thumbup1:
  5. and chestnuts horse, and sycamore norway maple too:thumbup1: never seen it on ailanthus, interesting
  6. a plane, showing the boabab bottle butt phenomina that is as yet of unkown cause as far as i am aware, David has a corker of an example Might not be as old as you think stephen.
  7. Their season is pretty well over, so no, they wouldnt 100% be present at this time, also usualy fruting in late stages of psuedomona when the bark has flaked away and revealed the strip cankers/necroses and they arent all pathogens, maybe with the exception of the Chondrostereum which even then needs a weakened host,hence secondary to Psuedomona a gram negative bacterium(non fungal)
  8. what a great candidate for a hedge pollard!
  9. O.k we need to cover some basics here dont we! No, what your describing now is a lichen, the terms Crustose and resupinate are "forms" not species type If something is shaped a certain way for example if its branching and fine it may be called Foliace, or upright may be fastigiate, scientific terms and latin, take some getting used to, but get used to them. You have a resupinate, crustose fungi
  10. no,this is a crustose fungi:thumbup1:
  11. I feel the trick for the future is a diverse range of methods, all adding to a complete solution, bit of solar, wind bio, hydro and hydrogen:thumbup1:
  12. loose bark also potentially psuedomona, often followed by flamulina velutipes, chondrostereum purpureum and Pluerotus ostreatus as secondaries
  13. thats what i was thinking, great macro:001_cool:
  14. this bodes well, there is going to be a massive boom in forestry and much planting to sustain these moves!
  15. I reckon in time many of these genetic differences will be revealed to be diversification within local populations, host adaptations over millenia. I note Stamets found differences in certain strains of Grifola frondosa, some difficult to culture on media, suspect this is where a few strains have become dependant on living hosts. So fascinating them fungi, I mean imagine giving up your saprotrophic lifestyle/skills to become entirely mycorrhizal, like the Amanitas. If there is a niche, the fungi will find it first!
  16. you might like this in relation too Guy Reishi Mushroom Identification: Hunt for an Herbal Remedy
  17. interesting what is the tree? taxodium/metasequoia?
  18. So, is the second layer of tubes being born as a new layer a particular identifying factor of G australe? Or are some of the other Gano species the same? I have a paper somewhere might take some finding, as I understand it applanatum is on its own in this regard and hence why it is a suitable host for the flat foot fly, though I would confirm this for yourself, i may be wrong, I can be! I've never considered how fungi grow, year to year, so this is all new information. Ergo, in this particular species, as long as food is present, would each tube layer represent a years growth. Annual brackets fade and rot away each year, perennials like fommes and ganos all add new layers till the resources run out. Furthermore, if the bracket stops increasing in size, would that indicate that it had exhausted the available food supply? Pretty much, also some brackets especialy ganoderma australe/rigidiporus ulmarius (Biotrophic) produce sterile conks with no tubes as a panic reproduction when the resources are running out and a sexualy compatible colonization hasn't occurred Could you recommend some literature, websites etc, I really need to expand my understanding of mycology. seek out anything written by Schwarze, Gerrit Jan Keizer but i will come back with some extras later when Ive gone through the hard drive, theres so much in it, could keep you reading for months if not years. the good/usefull stuff can be hard to find, but track it down, theres so much to find on basic internet searches when you know what to search for:thumbup1:
  19. wish i had that much soil to play with! could get some cash crops off it as well as my own produce!
  20. its a SYN:001_rolleyes: you might wanna see G. oregenense too for the redwoods out your neck of the woods, also of the resinaceum lucidum looking persuasion http://www.cals.ncsu.edu/plantpath/activities/labs-projects/myherb/Documents/profiles/Ganoderma%20curtisii%20Murr.pdf
  21. When it arrives I will do some little videos for you, this ones going to be fun!
  22. awesome post, some old skills given there:thumbup1:
  23. No dig is diferent to no till, which is a specific agri term which uses traditional machinery to plant through a green mulch that has been terminated. The idea is (with no dig) garden style or small homesteads/holdings is to build the soil ecology and to leave it undisturbed whilst planting through a mulch often with cardboard for an intermediate soil contact layer. It has proven very effective, shall dig out some links (pun intended!)
  24. thats a thing of Beauty Pat:001_cool: Man of many talents you are, shall look forward to some time in the woods this summer old school style:thumbup1: I have the best mates:001_cool:
  25. look forward to it:thumbup1:

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