Monday 14 October 2013

It's waxcap central......

To my surprise there are extensive fruitings of waxcaps in the third of the main fields around the house. I was surprised to find them in a second field a few weeks ago but this field is less botanically diverse than the two other fields with waxcaps and I wasn't expecting them to be there. There are also fairly profuse. One interesting aspect is the timing of the appearance of the fungi in the different fields. They have only just appeared in this field which is probably about eight weeks after they fruited in one of the other fields. There seem to be around four species, a single robust H. citrinovirens and lots of H. chlorophana and I think H. ceracea. The fourth example which I have not identified is pictured above.

Sunday 13 October 2013

New Species - Common Darter

I haven't actually recorded a dragonfly on site before although I have spotted a few large hawkers. We have no ponds on site (yet) so I don't really expect dragonflies in any great quantity. However Common Darters are found away from ponds and one posed patiently on the doorstep yesterday so I thought it was time to kick off the Odonata species list.

Sunday 6 October 2013

Waxcap heaven

At last the waxcaps have appeared in the 'waxcap' field and in some profusion although the set of species is not the same as when I was lasy able to record them in detail in 2011. In fact I am struggling with some of the identification and await the only UK book on waxcaps which I have just ordered. There are also more waxcaps in the other field where they have appeared this year. In that field I have seen Meadow Waxcap (Hygrocybe pratensis) and what must be Snowy Waxcap (Hygrocybe virginea) to add to the species already seen there. In the main waxcap field there are a couple of the iconic Pink Waxcaps (Hygrocybe calytriformis)and swathes of other waxcaps including H. chlorophana (Golden Waxcap) and H. ceracea (Butter Waxcap) plus others I am still working on. The picture is of H. calyptriformis.