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David

Shaggy inkcap on a lawn, Finchfield

Shaggy inkcap on a lawn, Finchfield

A shaggy inkcap mushroom, also called a lawyer’s wig, growing on the lawn outside low-rise flats opposite Bantock Park.

Shaggy inkcap on a lawn, Finchfield

As these and closely related mushrooms shed their spores, their caps disintegrate from the rime (“deliquescing”) to form a black gooey inky mass, which some people can be used to make ink.

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David

Umbellifer, gone to seed

Umbellifer, gone to seed

Some type of umbellifer, still flowering well into autumn. The flowers themselves, just intruding into shot, were past their best when I spotted the plant, so I focussed on the one which had turned to as yet unripe seed.

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David

Agaric with its fly

Agaric with its fly

Fly agaric mushroom. Its “warts all washed away by heavy rain, as a fly walks along the surface of the cap.

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David

Heading for cover: magpie, Compton Park

Heading for cover: magpie, Compton Park

A magpie heads into the cover of the vegetation on Compton Park pond. The laggard of a group of three which had been up to no good on the footbridge, and which fled when I crossed.

Heading for cover: magpie, Compton Park

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David

West Park: first shoveller returns

West Park: first shoveller returns

Every year, ten or so shovellers gather on West Park lake for a cosy berth through the winter. The first of this year’s arrived in mid-October. This male, just coming out of eclipse plumage, was busy with the shoveller habit of swimming round in a tight circle with its beak just below the surface of the water, shovelling for food.

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David

Glistening, deliquescing

Glistening, deliquescing

Glistening inkcaps can appear at any but the coldest times of year, but peak during the autumn “fungi flush” season. These were under trees, in Bantock Park and by the Railway Walk at Finchfield.