Wednesday Walk - A New Direction with Mushrooms and Mosses...

in #wednesdaywalk5 years ago (edited)

We've had really moist conditions this summer - perfect for mushrooms!
The other day I went down one of the back trails and ran across a very interesting mushroom that I had never seen growing in this area before.

New Mushroom Growing in the Forest. Looks Similiar to the Turkey Tail Mushroom

ringed mushroom perhaps turkey tail.JPG

Since it had just rained a bit earlier in the day I decided to grab my camera and head out back of our house through the pine meadow and into the beautiful mixed forest.
To my delight there was a marvelous array of fungal growths, mosses and lichens.
Come journey along with me for a forest walk deep into the woods where the mushrooms grow!

Back Trail Through the Forest

back trail through the forest.JPG

Look what I found when I lifted a leaf by that ringed mushroom - a frog!

frog by turkey tail like mushroom.JPG

There was some very colorful mushrooms growing, popping up all over the place!
Sorry I don't know what kind they are, I'm only familiar with the more common edibles like the boletes which we are finding now but not on this trek.

Pinkish Mushrooms Coming Up Among the Labrador Tea Plants

pinkish mushrooms growing among the labrador tea plants.JPG

These pinkish ones were quite common and I found them in different parts of the forest.

Let's have a look...

Pinkish Mushroom Growing By a Tiny Spruce Seedling

pink mushroom growing by tiny spruce seedling.JPG

A Pair of Pinkish Mushrooms

pair of pinkish colored mushrooms in the moss.JPG

On last pink mushroom...

Pretty Pink Mushroom

pretty pink mushroom.JPG

There was some yellow mushrooms too...

Glossy Yellow Mushroom

glossy yellow mushroom.JPG

Yellow Mushroom Growing in the Moss

yellow mushroom in the moss.JPG

And red mushrooms...

Red Mushroom Hiding Under the Spruce Bough

red mushroom hiding under bough of spruce.JPG

Miniature Red Mushroom with Little Brown Mushroom

miniture red mushroom and little tan mushroom in moss.JPG

Pair of Red Mushrooms and Pine Cone

2 red mushrooms and pine cones.JPG

Little Red Mushroom Perched in a Decaying Moss and Lichen Covered Old Stump

character stump with little red mushroom on it.JPG

There was some wonderful old stumps taking on a lot of character with the mosses and lichens growing on them.
I find it fascinating to study the miniature worlds created in decaying logs and stumps...

Wavy Edge Mushroom Finding a Home in the Moss Within an Old Lichen Covered Fallen Log

moss and lichen covered old stump with frilly mushroom in it.JPG

Tiny Brown Mushroom at Base of Moss and Lichen Covered Stump

moss and lichen covered stump with tiny round orangy brown mushroom at base.JPG

Look at This Moss Covered Stump - It Looks Like a Fairy Home

moss covered stump that looks like a fairy home.JPG

I found there to be a lot of beauty in the decay of aging fallen trees and stumps.

Trunk Beauty in Different Stages of Decay

3 old tree trunks 2 broken.JPG

Close Up of That Decaying Broken Tree Trunk

beauty in the decay of an old tree and stump.JPG

Lichen Covered Old Log and Decaying Tree With Squirrel Hide Outs

fallen trees and interesting stump covered with lichen in mossy forest.JPG

Close Up of that Decaying Tree with Red Mushroom Which Had Been Nibbled On

old stump with 4 doorways in it old log and nibbled red mushroom.JPG

Mossy Mound With Holes to Squirrel Stashes

mossy mound with three doorways to possible squirrel holes.JPG

Green Pine Cone Squirrel had Broken Apart on Old Log

green pine cone squirrel has taken apart on old log.JPG

Nice Array of Star Shaped Plants on Mossy Stump

mossy stump with 3 star shaped plants.JPG

Tree Seedling Growing on Old Stump with Fungi that Looks Like Coral at the Base

tree seedling growing on old stump with coral looking fungus at bottom of stump.JPG

Close Up of Fungi That Looks Like Coral

3 fungus at base of old stump that look like coral.JPG

Often found on decaying logs or stumps is different fungi and conks that help in the breaking up processes...

Scallop Like Fungi Growing on Old Log

scallop like fungus growing on old log.JPG

Colorful Conk on Old Tree Stump

colorful conks on tree stump.JPG

Dark Colored Conk on Stump and More Pinkish Colored Mushrooms

group9ng of pinkish mushroom pinky brown mushroom little brown mushroom coming up and conk.JPG

With our wet conditions there was even some very interesting fungi popping up right on the trail that was heavily covered in old pine needles and had parts of big old roots from trees growing along the edge of the trail that were partially exposed. These are ones I had never seen before.

Interesting Colony of Brown and White Ruffled Fungi Growing on Forest Floor

interesting colony of brown and white ruffled fungus on forest floor.JPG

Close Up of Brown and White Ruffled Fungi

interesting brown and white ruffley fungus.JPG

Colony of Brown Puff Balls Growing on Mossy Old Log

colony of brown puff balls on old mossy log.JPG

There were many different types of brown mushrooms growing up all over the place, each with their own unique beauty.
It's funny there was a section in my mushroom identifying book that just listed them as little brown mushrooms for they are so common and have different variations.

Interesting Colony of Brown Mushrooms

colony of little brown mushrooms.JPG

Little Brown Mushroom Growing in the Reindeer Moss

little brown mushroom growing in the reindeer moss.JPG

Brown Mushroom Growing in the Moss by Some Cranberries

brown mushroom growing in the moss by cranberries.JPG

Beautiful Brown Mushrooms Growing in the Moss

beautiful brown mushrooms in peat moss.JPG

Brown Mushroom Hiding Under a Small Blueberry Plant

round brown mushroom hiding under small blueberry plant.JPG

Interesting Colony of Tan Colored Mushrooms

interesting colony of tan colored mushrooms.JPG

Puff Balls Growing in the Wood Chips

puffballs growing in woodchips.JPG

Do you know why they call these round mushrooms puff balls?
When they are fully mature and the inside dry becoming full of spores, if you stomp on them they will puff out like brown smoke. We had great fun doing that at my grampa's farm when we we're little. Some of the puff balls grew quite big there. Some puffballs can be really tasting if you catch them before the insides dry into brown spores. I like to slice the big ones, bread them and fry them. M-m-m! M-m-m!

Returning home we see some tan colored mushrooms just popping out of the ground by the reindeer moss under the pine trees...

Tan Mushrooms Just Popping Up by the Reindeer Moss

mushrooms coming up in the reindeer moss.JPG

Also in the reindeer moss a beautiful blossom.

Fleabane Blossom in the Reindeer Moss

fleebane blossoms in reindeer moss.JPG

One last display of lichen on the rocks by the walkway leading to the house.

Lichen on the Rocks

lichen growing on rocks piled in corner by walkway.JPG

I hope you enjoyed the pictures exploring in the back woods, looking for these treasures as much as I did taking them! This is for my #WednesdayWalk , an initiative started by @tattoodjay and also for @riverflows #treasurefinds

All photos are mine taken with my Canon PowerShot A495

Thanks for stopping by!


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Oh my, there's so many types of mushrooms and so colourful! Amazing!

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Wow, what a variety of mushrooms and fungi you have in your forest! Do you know how many of those you got a photo of, are edible? I've always been scared of wild mushrooms for fear I'd get a poisonous kind.

Most of those mushrooms I photoed are not edible. I only pick wild mushrooms that I am familiar with and I know to be edible. None that are iffy.

I LOVED this post. What an incredible array of fungi! I love puffballs, but have seen none in our yard this year, due to construction. My favorite photo was the fairy house one. :))

Your opener photo took me a while to find the fungi. I thought that was a pretty picture of tree rings...

So! Many! Edible! Mushrooms!

Epic photo set, like a photo exhibition! You live in a wondrous place @porters!

Most of these are not edible although we do have lots of edible ones that grow in other areas. I just love exploring and can wander for hours out in the forest which is just out our back door!

The first one is all that's loading on my phone right now. Can't wait to see the rest when I'm on wifi! Is it still cold up there? It's waaaay too hot for mushrooms here, except on the south hugel that's staying really damp and well shaded by nineteen thousand melon vines.

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Ha! Your funny Nate and I love the jungle you have created! Most of the summer has been cool and damp - perfect for mushrooms, but now we are finally getting a bit more heat and a little drier - I even had to water some of my plants in containers for the first time this summer! The cool and damp played havoc with my peppers which were outside in a micro climate but with this heat my cucumbers and tomatoes which are growing in the covered garden/hoop house/greenhouse are finally starting to produce. I hope the warm weather keeps up so I can get more of a harvest!

@sketch.and.jam may be able to help identify some. Or @byronmushrooms15 if he's still around.

The first one looks kinda turkeytaily, but I don't think they grow like that. Did it have a stem, or was it growing around the circumference of a stick?

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When I first saw them I thought turkeytails (and you) but when I realized the grew in a full circle and had a stem that they were not turkeytails. They are beautiful and I had never seen them growing here before.

So many mushrooms. I hope some of those are edible or fun to try.

Wow lots of nice mushrooms looks like you found alot of russula these are the red yellow and light pink ones. You also found some ramaria that is the coral looking mushroom. The top one may be turkeytail but i've never seen them grow in a perfect round shape like that thus it might be some other polypore. The puffballs are Lycoperdon pyriforme, i've actually eaten these and they are pretty good.

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Hey @sketch.and.jam thanks for the info - now I can research them further! I do eat the puffballs but knew not to eat the russula. They were all so beautiful to look at and I could wander in the forest for hours looking into the miniature worlds - makes me think of fairies and ther is one part of the forest which is a black spruce bog area full of moss and ferrns ( and very wet this year) which I call my enchanted forest. The forest keeps me in awe and wonder!

I've read that parboiling the russula makes them edible but i'm too chicken to try it i dont want a stomache ache lol.

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My feeling exactly anything that there is a change it might cause upset stomach for some folks I leave it alone - there are plenty which are deliciously edible and i don't have to worry about getting sick eating them!

Wow, you have a lot of wonderful variety there! We've had a particularly DRY summer here in western Washington state, so there are pretty much no mushrooms to be seen at the moment, except for the dry "wood ear" type that cling to decaying logs. But with a little rain, I'm sure they will be abundant in the fall.

Thanks for sharing your very colorful walk in the woods!

=^..^=

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