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David

Still here: orange peel fungus

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A small patch of grass under a pair of beech trees by the side of Richmond Road has been surprisingly productive of fungi this autumn. Since September there have probably been at least seven or eight different species, easy to spot, at one time or another.

I first noticed these orange peel fungi towards the end of October. The same fruiting bodies remained almost two months later, still giving an impression of some carelessly discarded litter.

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David

Boars and piglets

Boars and piglet

I’m not sure quite why, but these pigs (the child’s ride excepted) all seem to me to be boars rather than sows.

The bronze statue was outside council offices in Winchester.  The hungry pig weathervane adorned a farm by a road out of the almost lost village of Dunwich, while the one representing just the head was over the East Gate at Warwick. The piglet was in a narrow side street in Cologne city centre.

Boars and piglet

Another piglet, in a shop window in Stratford on Avon.

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David

Tiny mushroom on mossy wall

Tiny mushroom on mossy wall

A stone wall with a thick coating of moss gave support to several other tiny plants. Among them were these equally tiny mushrooms, with distinctive caps like miniature umbrellas which had been blown inside out by the wind.

They’re too small and too easy to miss to have attracted a vernacular name. The pattern matching algorithm at iNaturalist IDs them as Arrhenia rickenii, but that is unconfirmed.

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David

Beware of the bears

Beware of the bears

Portrayals of bears, most of them not quite life sized. The gaudily coloured street decorations are from Berlin. The paler carved bears are arranged all round the courtyard of Lord Leycester’s Hospital in Warwick. The darker and actually life-sized one climbing a pole supplements the inn sign of the Bear in Berkswell. A young bear and its owner form the centrepiece of one of the misericords of the Priory church at Great Malvern.

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David

Weathervanes: going places

Weathervanes: going places

Individual weathervanes can sometimes be stunning examples of blacksmith’s art. These have a theme of transport (one is a huntsman and hound – I don’t remember ever seeing a vane showing a horse just being used to get from A to B).

That vane was just outside Penkridge. The motorbike was on a garage on the outskirts of Stafford. The galleon by the river mouth in Teignmouth. The other boats – are they Thames barges or coasters – where the river Blyth meets the see at Southwold. The loco is on the Great Western in Wolverhampton (the pub also has some nice railway memorabilia around the bars).

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David

Doorknockers and more: French connection

Doorknockers and more: French connection

In France, the fashion in doorknockers seems to run less to lions than to hands. Actually, this set includes ones seen in Ludlow, Bishops Castle, and one in Shottery before and after the door it was on had a fresh coat of paint.

Doorknockers and more: French connection

Not a doorknocker, but definitely French, this was one of the lampstands in the restaurant of the Hotel CroMagnon in les Eyzies. The village is at the centre of a region with numerous prehistoric sites, with a regional gastronomy centring on le canard.