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David

Shaggy inkcaps, recently emerged

Shaggy inkcaps, recently emerged

Shaggy inkcaps, one very recently emerged in a field near the canal at Compton. Another on the lawn in front of Wolverhampton College, had had just a little more time to develop.

Their caps spread a little, though they never get much wider than an “almost closed umbrella” position of the one outside the college. Then the shedding of spores, as the caps deliquesce: turning into a black slime which can be used to make a kind of ink.

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David

Pinkedge bonnet (perhaps)

Pinkedge bonnet (perhaps)

Tiny mushrooms, Himley Plantation. The tightly clustered group were growing on a fallen trunk, the more scattered individuals on a still standing tree. They may have been pinkedge bonnets (Mycena capillaripes).

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David

Glistening, rotting: vibernum berrries

Glistening, rotting: vibernum berrries

Lots of bright vibernum (guelder rose) berries glistening in the sunlight. They look like they should be tempting for hungry birds, but they seem to get ignored. Already, some are shrivelling and rotting on the bush.

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David

Mushroom mass on mossy fallen trunk, Himley Plantation

Mushroom mass on mossy fallen trunk, Himley Plantation

A mass of mushrooms growing from a moss-covered fallen tree trunk in Himley Plantation. iNaturalist IDed them as sheathed woodtufts (Kuehneromyces mutabilis)

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David

Can’t catch me

Can't catch me

Two squirrels which were busy chasing each other around on the ground during my last visit to Himley Plantation. When my path got too close, they retreated up the same tree, so the chase was probably not a territorial dispute.

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David

Rosy bonnets, Himley Plantation

Rosy bonnets, Himley Plantation

Delicate pink mushrooms – rosy bonnets (Mycena rosea) – growing in Himley Plantation, just yards from the spookier forms of some dead man’s fingers.