#fly agaric

LIVE

Check out my other blog: @fun-with-fungi

I recently moved and there’s this beautiful park in the area, and I’ve never seen so many amanita’s, even colors I didn’t think existed! So anyway, do you like these pictures? What could I do better?

lavandabrujeria: Amanita muscaria!! I was so excited to see this lil cutieI used to see these all lavandabrujeria: Amanita muscaria!! I was so excited to see this lil cutieI used to see these all lavandabrujeria: Amanita muscaria!! I was so excited to see this lil cutieI used to see these all

lavandabrujeria:

Amanita muscaria!! I was so excited to see this lil cutie

I used to see these all the time in Alaska, never had the balls to eat one though.


Post link
Bank Vole (Clethrionomys glareolus)

Bank Vole (Clethrionomys glareolus) by Phil Winter
Via Flickr:

Sutton Park, Birmingham, UK, October 2021Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria) I found swathes of these iconSutton Park, Birmingham, UK, October 2021Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria) I found swathes of these iconSutton Park, Birmingham, UK, October 2021Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria) I found swathes of these iconSutton Park, Birmingham, UK, October 2021Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria) I found swathes of these iconSutton Park, Birmingham, UK, October 2021Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria) I found swathes of these iconSutton Park, Birmingham, UK, October 2021Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria) I found swathes of these iconSutton Park, Birmingham, UK, October 2021Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria) I found swathes of these iconSutton Park, Birmingham, UK, October 2021Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria) I found swathes of these icon

Sutton Park, Birmingham, UK, October 2021

Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria) 

I found swathes of these iconic mushrooms while walking across Sutton Park yesterday - so large and distinctive they can often be identified by even the most beginner mycologists from a couple dozen metres away.

They’re the most beautiful little fairytale mushroom, and always gorgeous to spot. What a lot of people don’t realise at first is that the captivating ‘spots’ sported by the Amanitagenus are remnants of the universal veil- the spherical sack that these fungi emerge from. They tear it as they grow, the cap widening to split it as it stretches open, leaving spots of the white substance clinging to the surface of the cap. These loose remnants are not securely attached, meaning the ‘spots’ can be washed off fairly easily by rain, as you can see most prominently in the antepenultimate photo, which I at first thought was a red Russulaspecies, the spots of this specimen having been almost completely washed away, until I investigated beneath the cap to find a few scraps clinging to the edge (just visible) and a telltale ring around the stem. 


Post link
A crappy blurry photo of a fly argaric (Amanita muscaria) I took ages ago. Can’t wait for spri

A crappy blurry photo of a fly argaric (Amanita muscaria) I took ages ago. Can’t wait for spring to start so I can take some more decent pictures! I love fly agarics, they look so enchanting. They are psychoactive but you’ll probably get sick before you get high… It’s commonly found as a symbiont in pine plantations, which is where I found this one. Not a big fan of pine plantations, they are dark and creepy and monoculturey. 


Post link
loading