Things I’ve Seen
October 16, 2019 by New Hampshire Garden Solutions

We’re still very dry here and I haven’t seen hardly any of the mushrooms I’d expect to see but here was a dead birch tree full of golden pholiota mushrooms (Pholiota limonella) just like it was last year. I thought that’s what they were until I smelled them but these examples had no citrus scent, so I’d say they must be Pholiota aurivella which, except for its smaller spores and the lack of a lemon scent, appears identical.

The frustrating thing about mushroom identification is how for most of them you can never be sure without a microscope, and that’s why I never eat them. There are some that don’t have many lookalikes and though I’m usually fairly confident of a good identification for them I still don’t eat them. It’s just too risky.

One of my favorite fungal finds is called the tiger’s eye mushroom (Coltricia perennis.) One reason it’s unusual is because it’s one of the only polypores with a central stem. Most polypores are bracket or shelf fungi. The concentric rings of color are also unusual and sometimes make it look like a turkey tail fungus with a stem. The cap is very thin and flat like a table, and another name for it is the fairy stool. They are very tough and leathery and can persist for quite a long time.

I found it this hen of the woods fungus (Grifola frondosa,) growing at the base of an old oak tree. This edible polypore often grows in the same spot year after year and that makes it quite easy to find. They are said to look like the back of a brown hen’s ruffled feathers, and that’s how they come by their common name. Though they’re said to be brown I see green.

I saw a young fly agaric (Amanita muscaria v. formosa) in a lawn recently. I love the metallic yellow color of these mushrooms when they’re young. They’re common where pine trees grow and this one was under a pine. The name fly agaric comes from the practice of putting pieces of the mushroom in a dish of milk. The story says that when flies drank the milk they died, but it’s something I’ve never tried. Fly agaric is said to have the ability to “turn off” fear in humans and is considered toxic. Vikings are said to have used it for that very reason.

I don’t see many stinkhorn fungi but I hit the stinkhorn jackpot this year; there must have been 20 or more of them growing out of some well rotted wood chips. I think they’re the common stinkhorn (Phallus impudicus) and I have to say that for the first time I smelled odor like rotting meat coming from them because these example were passing on.

Here was a fresher example. The green conical cap is also said to be slimy but it didn’t look it. This mushroom uses its carrion like odor to attracts insects, which are said to disperse its sticky spores. I saw quite a few small gnat like insects around the dying ones.

At this time of year I always roll logs over hoping to find the beautiful but rare cobalt crust fungus (Terana caerulea,) but usually I find this lighter shade of blue instead. I think it is Byssocorticium atrovirens. Apparently its common name is simply blue crust fungus. Crust fungi are called resupinate fungi and have flat, crust like fruiting bodies which usually appear on the undersides of fallen branches and logs. Resupinate means upside down, and that’s what many crust fungi appear to be. Their spore bearing surface can be wrinkled, smooth, warty, toothed, or porous and though they appear on the undersides of logs the main body of the fungus is in the wood, slowly decomposing it. They seem to be the least understood of all the fungi.

Some slime molds can be very small and others quite large. This one in its plasmodium stage was wasn’t very big at all, probably due to the dryness. When slime molds are in this state they are usually moving-very slowly. Slime molds are very sensitive to drying out so they usually move at night, but they can be found on cloudy, humid days as well. I think this one might be spreading yellow tooth slime (Phanerochaete chrysorhiza.) Slime molds, even though sometimes covering a large area, are actually made up of hundreds or thousands of single entities. These entities move through the forest looking for food or a suitable place to fruit and eventually come together in a mass.

Jack in the pulpit berries (Arisaema triphyllum) are ripe and red, waiting for a deer to come along and eat them. Deer must love them because they usually disappear almost as soon as they turn red. All parts of the Jack in the pulpit plant contain calcium oxalate crystals that cause painful irritation of the mouth and throat if eaten, but Native Americans knew how to cook the fleshy roots to remove any danger. They used them as a vegetable, and that’s why another name for the plant is “Indian turnip.”

False Solomon’s seal (Smilacina racemosa) berries are fully ripe and are now bright red instead of speckled. Native American’s used all parts of this plant including its roots, which contain lye and must be boiled and rinsed several times before they can be used. Birds, mice, grouse, and other forest critters eat the ripe berries that grow at the end of the drooping stem. They are said to taste like molasses and another common name for the plant is treacle berry.

American mountain ash (Sorbus americana) is a native tree but you’re more likely to find them growing naturally north of this part of the state. I do see them in the wild, but rarely. Their red orange fruit in fall and white flowers in spring have made them a gardener’s favorite and that’s where you’ll see most of them here though they prefer cool, humid air like that found in the 3000 foot elevation range. The berries are said to be low in fat and very acidic, so birds leave them for last. For some reason early settlers thought the tree would keep witches away so they called it witch wood. Native Americans used both the bark and berries medicinally. The Ojibwe tribe made both bows and arrows from its wood, which is unusual. Usually they used wood from different species, or wood from both shrubs and trees.

Kousa dogwood fruit looks a little different but it’s the edible part of a Kousa Dogwood (Cornus kousa.) This dogwood is on the small side and is native to Asia. I don’t see it too often. It is also called Japanese or Korean Dogwood. Kousa Dogwood fruit is made up of 20-40 fleshy carpels. In botany one definition of a carpel is a dry fruit that splits open, into seed-bearing sections. Kousa dogwood fruits are said by some to taste like papaya.

In my own experience I find it best to leave plants with white berries alone because they are usually poisonous, and no native plant illustrates this better than poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans.) Though many birds can eat its berries without suffering, when most humans so much as brush against the plant they can itch for weeks afterward, and those who are particularly sensitive could end up in the hospital. I had a friend who had to be hospitalized when his eyes became swollen shut because of it. Eating any part of the plant or even breathing the smoke when it is burned can be very dangerous.

All parts of the yew tree (Taxus) are poisonous except (it is said) the red flesh of the berry, which is actually a modified seed cone. The seed within the seed cone is the most toxic part of the plant and eating as few as 3 of them can cause death in just a few hours. In February of 2014 a man named Ben Hines died in Brockdish, Norfolk, England after ingesting parts of yew trees. Nobody has ever been able to figure out why he did such a thing but the incident illustrated how extremely toxic yews are.

Beavers are trying to make a pond in a river and they had dammed it up from bank to bank. It wasn’t the biggest beaver dam I’ve seen but it was quite big. The largest beaver dam ever found is in Canada’s Wood Buffalo National Park and spans about 2,800 feet. It has taken several generations of beavers since 1970 to build and it can be seen from space. Imagine how much water it is holding back!

Eastern or Virginia carpenter bees (Xylocopa virginica) are huge; at least as big as half my thumb. They also look very different than the bumblebees that I’m used to. These bees nest in wood and eat pollen and nectar. They don’t eat wood but they will excavate tunnels through rotten wood. The adults nest through winter and emerge in spring. Though it is said to be common in the eastern part of the country I I see very few. I’ve read that they can be up to an inch long and this one was all of that. Females can sting but they do so only when bothered. Males don’t have a stinger.

Folklore says that the wider the orangey brown band on a wooly bear caterpillar is, the milder the winter will be. If we’re to believe it then this winter will not be very mild because this wooly bear has more black than brown on it. In any event this caterpillar won’t care, because it produces its own antifreeze and can freeze solid in winter. Once the temperatures rise into the 40s F in spring it thaws out and begins feeding on dandelion and other early spring greens. Eventually it will spin a cocoon and emerge as a beautiful tiger moth. From that point on it has only two weeks to live.

The upper surface of a painted lady’s wings look very different than the stained glass look of the undersides but unfortunately I can’t show that to you because the photos didn’t come out. This painted lady was kind enough to land just in front of me on a zinnia. It’s the only one I’ve seen this year.

There is little that is more appropriate than a bee sleeping on a flower, in my opinion. Here in southwestern New Hampshire we don’t see many wildflowers in October, but every now and then you can find a stray something or other still hanging on. The bumblebee I saw on this aster early one morning was moving but very slowly, and looked more like it was hanging on to the flower head rather than harvesting pollen. Bumblebees I’ve heard, sleep on flowers, so maybe it was just napping. I suppose if it has to die in winter like bumblebees do, a flower is the perfect place to do that as well. Only queen bumblebees hibernate through winter; the rest of the colony dies. In spring the queen will make a new nest and actually sit on the eggs she lays to keep them warm, just like birds do.
It’s not what you look at that matters, it’s what you see. ~Henry David Thoreau
Thanks for coming by.
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Posted in Nature, Things I've Seen | Tagged Beaver Dam, Blue Crust Fungus, Canon EOS Rebel T6, Cinnamon Fairy Stool Mushroom, False Solomon's Seal Fruit, Fly Agaric Mushroom, Golden Pholiota Mushroom, Hen of the Woods, Jack in the Pulpit Berries, Keene, Kousa Dogwood Fruit, Mountain Ash Fruit, Mushrooms, Native Plants, Nature, New Hampshire, NH, Olympus Stylus TG-870, Painted Lady Butterfly, Poison Ivy Berries, Sleeping Bee, Spreading Yellow Tooth Slime Mold, Stinkhorn Mushroom, Swanzey New Hampshire, Virginia Carpenter Bee, Wild Mushrooms, Wooly Bear Caterpillar, Yew Berry | 30 Comments
Another set of beautiful photographs.
Thanks Ben!
🙂
Thank you for the extra information about the Vikings and their use of fly agaric! Since it started raining here I’ve seen so much fungi on my travels but haven’t had the time to stop and investigate, unfortunately. I enjoyed all your examples especially the hen of the woods – what a beauty!
You’re welcome Clare. That’s a very interesting subject!
You’re lucky to be seeing so many fungi. I usually see many hundreds of them but not this year. That’s the only hen of the woods I’ve seen too, which is very unusual.
Beautiful photos, and it is always an education stopping by here, Allen. I have seen bees sleeping or resting in flowers here, too. Most curious were the ones in the vineyard resting for the night on grape leaves, like little truckers pulled over beside the highway for the night.
Thank you Lavinia. I can’t remember ever seeing one sleeping on a leaf but I don’t know why they wouldn’t.
Around here you are much more likely to see a kousa dogwood than a flowering dogwood, at least in gardens. The kousas are hardier here, I think.
They do well here but most people want natives or native hybrids if they can get them.
Great post! Mushrooms are always neat and quite a miracle of nature. Several years ago my dad cut down the Yews at our church and brought them home and put in the ditch to burn. He didn’t know they were toxic and lost four cows within a few hours…
That’s too bad, but it does show just how toxic yews are.
That was a beautiful picture of the hen of the woods fungus. I see it as more brown than green.
Thank you. I’m guessing the color you see is more accurate than what I see.
Dear Allen,
I thought you might like to see the attached photos showing the back side of a painted lady’s wings, taken in early and mid-September in our back yard in Belmont, MA. We’ve introduced several native plants into our garden — like the anise hyssop pictured below — and they’ve drawn many new (to me) small visitors. I’ve been taking their pictures and, gradually, learning their names (including “painted lady”). I’ve so enjoyed this blog since discovering it back in June. It’s been fascinating to go along on these expertly guided nature walks as one of your invisible companions!
With appreciation, Sam Rubin
On Wed, Oct 16, 2019 at 4:10 AM New Hampshire Garden Solutions wrote:
> New Hampshire Garden Solutions posted: ” Weâre still very dry here and I > havenât seen hardly any of the mushrooms Iâd expect to see but here was a > dead birch tree full of golden pholiota mushrooms (Pholiota limonella) just > like it was last year. I thought thatâs what they were until I smelled ” >
Thanks very much Sam, and welcome. I’d love to see your photos but WordPress won’t let you attach them to a comment. If you leave a comment on the “Contact Me” page I’ll be able to send you an email and then you can attach photos to your reply as you normally would.
I’m happy to hear that you’re enjoying the blog!
Didn’t know about woolly bears and anti-freeze. Oh, nature!
Very informative! Thanks.
It is said that the Yew tree, which is quite hard and tough, is second only to Osage orange as the preferred bow wood of the North American Indians. I can vouch for that. I once made a copy of a Northwest Coast Indian seal club. It took me forever to finish it.
I began reading up on carpenter bees after encountering them on a dead cedar tree on a central Texas ranch I worked on in the late 90s. They had really perforated it.
Did you know that the youngest of the eggs they lay in their tunnels hatch first and then in proper sequence afterward?
On Wed, Oct 16, 2019, 5:10 AM New Hampshire Garden Solutions New Hampshire Garden Solutions posted: ” We’re still very dry here and I > haven’t seen hardly any of the mushrooms I’d expect to see but here was a > dead birch tree full of golden pholiota mushrooms (Pholiota limonella) just > like it was last year. I thought that’s what they were until I smelled ” >
Thank you Ron. I’ve cut down a lot of old yews in the past and can certainly vouch for the toughness of the wood but it’s a shame that I never tried to make anything from it.
I didn’t know that about carpenter bees. Very interesting!
I don’t see many of them in this area.
Yew’s very beautiful. The heartwood is red and the sapwood is cream.
Did you enjoy the book about Ishi?
I wish I had taken a closer look!
I haven’t started the book yet. I don’t have much time for reading these days and I’m half way through a different one. When I finish that one Ishi is next.
You’ll find it fascinating.
I believe that!
Thoreau is absolutely right. I see both green and brown in the hen of the woods. Thanks for the wooly bear info. I guess I didn’t connect the wooly bear with caterpillars and I don’t believe I’ve seen a tiger moth; perhaps I have but didn’t know his/her name.
Thank you Sally for confirming at least part of what I saw on the hen. Colorblindness means I’m never really sure.
The wooly bear caterpillar moth is actually called the sabella tiger moth. It isn’t real showy.
Loved that bit of minutiae about the Vikings and it made me wonder about the ‘science ‘ involved there and how they figured it out. The early food explorers were quite adventurous and I’m sure not a few of them died in their quest for their next meal.
Now, I find the idea of slime mold creeping around the forest at night creeps me out! I’ve had it appear in wood chip mulch virtually overnight. Ugh! The stuff of horror movies, lol. Have a good day, Allen.
Thank you Ginny. I was just reading that Viking “berserkers” also used henbane to become such furious warriors. I would guess that remains of both henbane and fly agaric have been found in their settlements.
Slime molds aren’t slimy and they aren’t molds, and they won’t hurt you! Scientists have found that they display a form of “group think” much like a school of fish or a flock of birds. It’s fascinating stuff!
Sorry, Allen, but you can have all my “fascinating” slime mold. Heh heh, I didn’t say my feelings on this were rational 😵
I can understand your point of view but I’d like to see a lot more of them.
Loved your selection of bright red berries, so cheerful.
Thank you Susan, we see a lot of them at this time of year.