Friday, 11 October 2013

The woodland floor and the stream

A bigoted person (not Toad or Toadlet) troubled me this morning so after some chores I went for a scrabble around on the woodland floor up the hill in search of composure and calmness. There is wreckage and tangled growth of fallen trees up there but the undergrowth quietly gets on with generating new life. Fungi, mosses and lichens eat up decay and trees and flowers settle themselves for winter so that they can grow anew come spring. Looking and marvelling at details I forgot my annoyance.

Photos should be clickable to enlarge

Light through leaves is always nice
Light through azalea leaves on the way up the garden

A new fungus at the base of the cypress
at the top of the garden

in situ

close up

And a patch of sunlight on fallen
birch and cypress leaves

















Then I climbed over our fence, across to the forest fence, over that, and into the wood. Colourful and varied fungi and lichens were everywhere.

Here's one with a sterile frond of hard fern
and some wood sorrel leaves

There was a dead tree trunk covered in these
– many broken like this

Some of the same but less broken



Note the dried bluebell stalks here too

A lovely example of a Cladonia lichen
(I think! not sure what kind)


Colourful fungus on a dead spruce trunk

I tried to move the grass off it and then realised
the grass was embedded in the fungus

A young version of the same?















Another wee fungal garden on a fallen tree

Closer in

This picture made me smile

I moved on to look at other things and nearly trod on this
Probably trod on some of these; they littered the forest floor
The forest floor is fascinating. In a small space, say half a square metre, many small things appear. Here are a small spruce tree (top left), an oak (bottom left) and a holly (bottom right) surrounding a young hard fern (Blechnum spicant). Almost half way down the left edge is a liverwort.


Spruce needles give some scale
 The liverwort closer in

And closer 1

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                                                                      3  

I found a nice simple example of the upright fertile fronds of Hard Fern
Hard Fern fertile fronds. These die in winter

And the evergreen sterile fronds of Hard Fern
on the ground

Baby bilberry plants among the moss
By now I was back to the stream and thoroughly enjoyed myself watching bubbles and looking at leaf dams upstream of the tiny waterfalls.





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Over the forest fence again, down the field to check out the hips and haws


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And so back up our drive, where there are still a few blue flowers of alkanet, a quick scramble between rhododendrons and mad fuchsias down by the pond to look at yet more fungi and an upsidedown fuchsia flower sitting on duckweed.





A scrumply fungus













And a floating flower

And so home to a good lunch. Nothing like rooting around in the wood for forgetting about the stupidness of bigotry, and getting an appetite for bacon. And my hat wasn't nearly as well-decorated with bits of twig and leaf as I expected.

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