Sunday, October 29, 2006

stinkhorn

...at long last we have found a stinkhorn. We can always smell them but they are difficult to find Posted by Picasa

late begonias

autumn in Luckett (Broadgate); it is almost November but the hanging baskets are still full of begonias in bloom Posted by Picasa

Sunday, October 22, 2006

persicaria

slippery jack


almost every mushroom that I find has a small bite out of its cap, is there a mad mushroom taster in the parish? This is (probably; the guide books are always a bit vague) slippery jack because the surface is very slimy (glutinous in the jargon) and has distinctly yellowish flesh growing in the pine plantations at Kelly Bray. Edible, perhaps. I think that I am a mycophobic lurcher and must therefore be descended from a long line of anglosaxon hounds.

fuchsia


this elegant fuchsia was flowering in Kelly Bray woods, it is not f. magellanica found in the wild (but not native?) and must be an escapee. It has been suggested recently that about one-quarter of plants sold to ornamental gardeners since the 1800s have escaped, and 30 per cent of these are firmly established in the English countryside.