Posts Tagged ‘Cinnamon Fairy Stool Mushroom’
Things I’ve Seen
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 on October 16, 2019| 30 Comments »
Time For A Climb
Posted in Fungi, Lichens, Nature, Orchids, Scenery / Landscapes, tagged Canon SX40 HS, Cicada, Cinnamon Fairy Stool Mushroom, Clavaria ornatipes Club Fungus, Club Coral Fungi, Downy Rattlesnake Plantain Orchid, Granite Bedrock, Lichens, Looper Moth, Mount Caesar, Mount Caesar Swanzey NH, Mount Monadnock Jaffrey NH, Mountain Hiking, Native Plants, Nature, New Hampshire, NH, Panasonic Lumix DMC-527, Purple Coral Fungi, Reindeer Lichen, Starflower, Swanzey New Hampshire, Toadskin Lichens on August 12, 2015| 38 Comments »
I haven’t had time to do much climbing over the last few months so I thought I’d make up for the lapse by climbing Mount Caesar in Swanzey. It’s one of my favorite climbs because there is so much to see there, like this drift of reindeer lichen that looks like a snowy path through the woods even in August.
The uphill climb isn’t steep but it’s steady. Recent logging operations here haven’t helped the trail any, but at least it wasn’t muddy.
In some places the granite bedrock is exposed. I like the patterns of minerals in it.
Starflowers (Trientalis borealis) have gone to seed but the tiny white seed pods haven’t opened yet.
Starflower seed pods look like tiny soccer balls and can be tough to get a good photo of. Putting a penny on a stump to use as a background helped.
I found a dead cicada on the trail and put him on a stump for a better photo too. I never knew they were so blue.
As if to illustrate how you can hike the same trail a hundred times and still not see all there is to see, I found downy rattlesnake plantain orchids growing right beside the trail. I can’t believe that I’ve walked right by them all these years without seeing them.
This orchid’s flowers are very small and hard to photograph, so I went back with a piece of black artists foam core board and got this shot so you could see what they look like. They look a lot like the flowers of the checkered rattlesnake plantain that I showed in another recent post and indeed the two plants are thought to cross pollinate naturally. I don’t know what made them appear so sparkly in this photo.
Acorns were falling all around me but the real surprise was hearing a large tree fall off in the woods. I couldn’t see it and was glad I wasn’t anywhere near it because it made a tremendous crashing sound when it fell. That’s a rare experience for me.
Cinnamon fairy stools (Coltricia cinnamomea) grew here and there all along the trail. They get their common name from the concentric bands of cinnamon brown coloring on their inch diameter caps. They are a tough, leathery polypore which, if picked when fresh, will hold their color and shape for a long time.
My Mushroom books don’t say much about club shaped fungi but I think this might be Clavaria ornatipes. This fungus is described as spatula or club shaped and greyish to pinkish gray. It grew directly out of the ground.
The reason club and coral fungi grow the way they do is to get their spores, which grow on their tips, up above the soil surface so the wind can disperse them. This example is another of the Clavaria club fungi I think, but I haven’t been able to identify it.
There are good views to the south from the top of Mount Caesar though on this day it seemed just a bit hazy.
It was a very hot and humid day with temperatures approaching 90 degrees and I found myself wishing I was swimming at Swanzey Lake rather than sitting up here in full sun.
I couldn’t leave without looking across the hills to Mount Monadnock over in Jaffrey. It’s the highest mountain in these parts and is also the second most climbed mountain in the world, and on a day like this there were probably hundreds of people on it.
My friends the toad skin lichens (Lasallia papulosa) were very dry and ashy gray for the most part, but I did find a moist green one here and there. I’ve only seen these lichens growing on the very tops of hills so visiting them comes with a price. They’re beautiful and rarely seen though, so it’s a price I’m willing to pay.
I never would have seen this moth if it hadn’t flown in front of me to land on a tree trunk. Even though I knew where it had landed I had a hard time finding it, so perfect was its camouflage. I think it might be a looper moth in the family Noctuidae. There are many, including some familiar ones like the cabbage looper and the golden looper. They all seem to be experts in camouflage, just as this one was.
Easily the most beautiful thing I saw on this day was this violet coral fungus (Clavaria zollingeri.) My daughter had climbed here the day before and told me that she had seen it but this is a big mountain and I had little hope of finding it. Her directions were perfect though and there it was; the most beautiful coral fungus that I’ve ever seen. I knelt before it to admire its beauty and forgot the heat, the mosquitoes, and even myself for a while.
The events of the past day have proven to me that I am wholly alive, and that no matter what transpires from here on in, I have truly lived. ~Anonymous mountain climber
Thanks for coming by.