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Paul in the woods

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Everything posted by Paul in the woods

  1. I know that plant as the parasitic purple thing, a quick google reminds me it's purple toothwort. Wiki says it's know as clandestine in France, is that true?
  2. Does it have a smell at all? To me at least different woods can smell very different, mature oak for example smells almost horseradishy. (That may well just be me though).
  3. Your shrub looks like a viburnum to me, possibly Viburnum tinus or similar. Which would mean the damage is very likely to be viburnum beetle. If you google that you'll see lots of pics of similar damage.
  4. I would suggest it's a large grey oyster mushroom, Pleurotus ostreatus. You'd obviously need to be sure if anyone intends to nibble it but it's a starting point.
  5. Have you thought about hurley sticks? Plenty of old posts if you search on hurley. E.g
  6. Honesty by the looks of them, Lunaria annua.
  7. I only buy cheap items and restore stuff for our own house, so a good clean, a few small repairs and a good wax is all I do. All I can advise is make sure you have a realistic selling price in mind, it might be nice to spend time French polishing an item but is anyone willing to pay you for all that work?
  8. Pink, studded jacket to match your thong?
  9. It might be Witches' Butter, Exidia glandulosa, https://www.first-nature.com/fungi/exidia-glandulosa.php More pics here: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Exidia_glandulosa Not something I'm that familiar with.
  10. I think you still need a licence to trap crayfish. Worth reading up on the rules especially trap design to prevent other animals drowning. Permission to trap crayfish, eels, elvers, salmon and sea trout - GOV.UK WWW.GOV.UK Get permission or a licence to trap crayfish, eels, elvers, salmon, sea trout, lamprey and smelt: how to apply and...
  11. What tree are they growing on? Looks similar to an ornamental elder I have. The fungi look like Jelly Ears, aka wood ears etc, Auricularia auricula-judae.
  12. Public registers and consultation on forestry projects - GOV.UK WWW.GOV.UK Use the public registers to find details on proposed forestry work and on decisions that the Forestry Commission has...
  13. Loquat, Eriobotrya japonica?
  14. If you mean Auricularia auricula-judae aka Wood ear etc then no. It looks more like a Peziza of some sort.
  15. I did check the instructions of my cheap moisture meter and it didn't say if it was dry or wet basis but the model does have the word DRY in it so I assume dry. This means my 25% logs are likely to be 20% wet basis, which is nice.
  16. This might be of use: https://www.forestresearch.gov.uk/documents/1979/FR_BEC_Testing_Moisture_Content_Simple_method_2011.pdf
  17. I would have said it looks more like a cluster of eggs, hatched in the 2nd pic. A quick google shows gypsy moths ( Lymantria dispar ) egg sacks as looking very similar but I thought it was rare in the uk. Looking at the RHS it is found in London.
  18. I wonder if this is the same ranger? " They said they were looking for scrap metal and batteries. " https://www.devonlive.com/news/devon-news/suspicious-men-driving-red-ford-3801284
  19. Thanks Edward, any idea what the definition of a major branch is? Anything over 8cm or is there a simple definition?
  20. Do you have a reference for that as I can't find anything. It would seem logical but I've seen it mentioned branchwood is excluded. To be honest the Forestry Commission doesn't provide a simple couple of page guide. The documents and guides I found online a few years back have all been moved so any useful documents are even harder to find. The link I posted was from the governments guide: https://www.gov.uk/guidance/tree-felling-licence-when-you-need-to-apply#exemptions You could look at the Forest Mensuration Handbook, google FCBK039.pdf , and scan through the 280 odd pages. Page 46 of the pdf (44 of the booklet) discusses single trees. Or you could ask your local woodland officer.
  21. This any help? https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/826786/TimberVolumeCalculator.pdf
  22. Yes, I read the Wildlife Trust comment "It is ideal prey for owls, weasels and kestrels." We have owls about every night here, a kestrel most days and frequent stoats and weasels so the poor voles get kept in check.
  23. I would guess at the ubiquitous bank vole? There's quite a few similar holes about our slopey woodland, more so than I've noticed in the past. I wonder if they've been forced to dig fresh tunnels due to the recent wet weather?
  24. Interesting, I've been advised to be careful of mammals living in the stools of overstood hazel but I didn't expect them to be so big... Are you removing all the stems in the overstood hazel or leaving any shoots? It has been suggested to me to leave a few young stems if I try and rejuvenate a old stools but I'm not sure it's necessary. This might be something you'll come to later but I'm curious to know your plans when most of the woodland is back into management and you have much less firewood to sell. Do you plan to sell many coppice products for example?

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