tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662118368553266438.post5081251421687753892..comments2024-03-22T20:11:44.673-04:00Comments on Saratoga woods and waterways: Autumn on an Old LogJacqueline Donnellyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13390548854179921303noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662118368553266438.post-25985701733022601082021-10-30T18:55:00.740-04:002021-10-30T18:55:00.740-04:00I love all those tinyfungi. Amazing what you fou...I love all those tinyfungi. Amazing what you found on that fallen log!The Furry Gnomehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02485265576983125216noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662118368553266438.post-6443176932961091162021-10-30T09:54:38.145-04:002021-10-30T09:54:38.145-04:00This is a nice "preview" of our upcoming...This is a nice "preview" of our upcoming walk in these wonderful woods.<br /><br />Ah fungi -- so hard to tell those tiny ones apart !<br />iNat agrees on the Scutellinia setosa for the smaller yellower Eyelash Cups,<br />but in looking at their photos of choices for the gelatinous yellow fungus we saw, it comes closer to Dacrymyces chrysospermus (Orange Jelly Spot). Not as pronounced a "stem" on what we saw.<br />Also check out their photos of Ascocoryne cylichnium (a relative of Purple Jelly Fungus) as an alternative for the Copper Penny (Pachyella clypeata) -- they look so much alike, though --quite a bit of overlap !<br />But there are more photos there than my mushroom book to compare against, plus maps.<br />Sometimes I put up an observation with my guess and wait for comments to come in, that in itself is a learning experience! <br /><br />suephttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01413896904031019699noreply@blogger.com