Showing posts with label white slime mold. Show all posts
Showing posts with label white slime mold. Show all posts

Friday, August 13, 2021

Naturalist Curiosity

How do we love slime molds and fungi? 
Well, I assume not a lot of people like it.

I don't know why insects, slime mold, and fungi fascinate me. Maybe it is because they are part of such an incredibly small world that we never stop to look at.

White Tube Slime 
or
White Footed Slime
or
Honeycomb Coral Slime?

Take your pick. Hopefully I can go back out today and see if this grew at all and that might help ID it.
This slime mold [?] is smaller than a pencil lead.

Who am
I?


I don't know! There are possibilities, but none of the beetles I found while searching was this tiny. This insect is perched on one goldenrod blossom, that makes it very small.
More cool
slime molds



The penny is used to give the viewer an idea at the size of the cool white slimey stuff. It actually feels rather sticky. But its webs and details are so intriguing.

More cool
strange slime/fungi
white 'stuff'



Of course, this could be white footed slime which if it remains in a moist and warm place would develop into something identifiable. But the forecast looks dry for the next 7 to 8 days.
And then on to my favorites. The Dog Barf/Vomit or another name? Deer Barf! 
Or perhaps Scrambled Egg Slime.

Growing on my
mulch.
Harmless but strange!


Growing on a stump in the pasture.


My favorite fall insect. The Orb Weaver. She decided to set up in my Petunias and has been catching those awful Japanese Beetles that destroy my 4 O'Clocks!

Golden Orb Weaver
Garden


I like her, she is very productive. I've seen her wrap up about 2 of these beetles a day. I'm sure her 'kids' will love what she stored for them!

Lastly.
My only decent star trails/Perseids photo. I sat in the driveway yesterday morning and watched for a while before I decided to try and get a photo. There were 3 meteors that flashed through, but because I used LiveComp, the star trails sort of hide them. This was over my house which was Northwest and not the direction I was supposed to be looking.


And for those who 'see' things. I took a shot of a Teddy Bear cloud. I spent all morning trying to get that SD card to work. I lost it all by reformatting it. That is the first time in 10 years that happened to me. 

However to save the day, I took a terrible shot through the screen of a Duck while we were eating supper.

Ducky or
Bird 
in a wire Cage!


There.
I am off to find more curiosities in small places. 

I still am not allowed to do strenuous things. So I am ducking out of mowing and taking the afternoon to go explore a refurbished trail at KVR.
[Crossed Fingers...that is what I wish to do!]

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

Nemophilist

~One who haunts the woods. A love or fondness for forests and woods.~

Forests promote human well being. Yep, there is an abstract worth reading if you can get through the gobbilty gook by the National Institute of Health. There are tons of studies on humans and being able to just get outside and how a simple walk in the woods or on a wooded path enhances your health.

Well a lesson regarding human health was not my intention. But if I can walk along our fencelines and walk through the woods every day, I can get a sense of things that are happening in the forest.

Late Sunday, I walked with Charlie in the light rain fall and was happy to note that the pair of Barred Owls were talking where I expected they would be. I've noticed for a few years that they like to hang out in one particular section of the woods . I have never found their nest, but do love to listen to them call to each other while I am slowly wandering.

I realize that I am using all of my senses when I am in the forest. Smelling the plants and air around me. Listening for birds, deer whistles, turkey clucks, chipmunks, hawks, ...squirrels scolding us, water running over rocks, the wind sighing above us...

Oh and a skeeter buzzing my ears.

All at the same time I am peering at moss, lichen, rocks, plants, and looking for neat insects or fungi or anything that is interesting and curious.

Centipede in a false morel...


A slug party that I was not invited to.
Slugs are cool in a way but not in your garden of course. Do you know that the slime trail they leave is so they can find their way back? I didn't. 


A very wee bee visiting a Virginia Waterleaf flower. It took me many tries to get one clear shot of it.


Who can resist looking for fungi and slime in damp, humid, rainy weather?

Coral Slime aka Ceratiomyxa fruticulosa. I like the Coral Slime mold name much better. It was super small but the tiny bit of white caught my eye as I was searching for insects.


This is my new favorite slime mold.
Shotgun Fungi or Canon Slime found on horse manure. Yep.
I stopped in the woods to bend down close and look at a pile of horse/mule poop to see why it was fuzzy looking and yellow colored.



My husband was not as excited as I was when I told him about it. He wrinkled his nose and gave me a look.

"The people in the white coats are coming to take you away," he quipped.

"That's okay honey, I can't help it. I'm a Nemophile or if you wish a Xylophile."

Pardon me while I have some fun with words. 

I think I'll go back out to the woods now....so much to see...

Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Fun fun Fun..gi and Slime Mold

What should a person do when they live wayyyy out in the country during a a time when you don't feel like co-mingling with other humans?

It is the end of September and the forest is full of creepy, ingenious, and strange growths. So, I spend an hour or so each day walking around the section of the woods that is deep and dark. Where the logs are moss covered. Where old bones from animals lay. It is a place that I didn't go through often because the canopy is so dark and there is little undergrowth.

It is a spooky part of our woods.

I never knew there could be so many things to see in such a small area!

The hard part is trying to figure out what on earth I am finding!

Some of it is easy. Old Chicken of the woods. When fresh, they are bright orange. These are old, but still very impressive in size. Apparently it can be eaten if you know your Fungi. I wouldn't eat this though. Looks a bit on the yucky side.


Blobs.
I found Blobs of white in spots all over the forest floor. I've seen them before but just ignored them while hiking. Not this week. I decided to go ahead and try to figure out what these strange things were.



So at first I poked it with a stick and then with my finger. They feel like a mushroom or fungi. I did some digging and came up with a possible ID. The Shrimp of the Woods. One site said it was a malformed aborted mushroom and another said it was a parasitic fungi that ate other fungi. I am not going to go ahead and give it the scientific name as I am not really quite sure. I have more investigating to do.

I've collected many photos in the past few days and am still trying to figure out what I'm seeing.

Slime Mold?
Here is a photo of my foot in the middle of the white stuff. Is is slime mold? What stage is it if it is?
I really have no idea of what I am seeing so I just photograph it out of curiosity .


Here is a close up of the white stuff. It is gorgeous! It looks like a snow-scape doesn't it? 


Here is the edge of the 'stuff' with a dime for size reference.


It isn't really slimly and icky. Just a bit odd. 
I hunted around the forest a bit more and noted something white on another log. 
Think of the size of flea eggs when you see this as it is a macro shot with my little Tough Camera in the microscopic mode:


I will go back once a day to see what this turns into. I've been trying to do some investigating and slime mold has a 'fruiting' stage.
Oh heck, I have NO idea what I am talking about here.

Just that this stuff is cool, interesting and worth photographing as it changes.
Perhaps I can figure out what it is one of these fine days.

Something tiny but pretty. Yellow Fairy Cup Fungi!
I found this on a piece of wood. Thank goodness for its bright color or I would have missed it. 


The forest always has some sort of surprise!
Here is a slug hugging a tiny puff ball!



And for the last shot of this day another group of fungi growing on a log.


I call these Fungi...a Happy Little Family.
I'm pretty sure I can imagine woodland creatures hiding nearby.

By the way. The color of the trees are magnificent. In the past few days, I've had to run a few errands and I've been able to stop and take some photos.
But this fungi stuff is fascinating also. 
More fall color photos tomorrow. I promise!

And more Strange Fungi or Slime Mold too!