I gather the fairies are only playing because the taste is so horrid anyone would spit it out at once! Still it’s a shame because they do look yummy.
@Deborah-SSi In the n/l today, mentioned her garden shed shaking in the wind, and, safe in Argyll, sheltered to the south by a steep hill, I offer commiserations to any who suffered damage due to ex-hurricane Ophelia. When I was still working in London and only getting to Gower at weekends, I once had a friend to stay. We drove into town (Abertawe) for something and, on the way back, came around a corner…and there, in the middle of the road, was a garden shed, upright and in good order, door closed. Only it’s location betrayed that it didn’t belong there! I hope Dee’s shed does not end up in a similar situation and that all of you manage not to have anything important, valuable or dangerous blown away! Oddly, on that day with the shed in the road, we hadn’t thought the winds all that bad!!
It was fine, diolch. It just looked funny the way it was wobbling about. I hadn’t seen it do that before
That kind of wind, even when it isn’t a hurricane any more, is pretty impressive and can do some pretty amazing things. Of course, we don’t get hurricanes in the middle of the USA, but we do have some pretty powerful winds sometimes (and also tornados, which can be much more descructive than hurricanes because they give so little warning). I have never actually seen a tornado, but powerful straight-line winds I have seen.
Swmae pawb. Arrived at temple 86 ddoe, yesterday. Raining today so, as I’d been on the go for nine days, I didn’t go further than Pizza Hut! Yfory, tomorrow, the plan is to get to 87 and 88. The forecast which was good for Saturday now isn’t and it’s going to be raining Sunday and Monday as well. Side effects of Typhoon (teiffŵn?) Lan. There are 88 temples to visit but as I started at 24 I still have more to visit.
There are very few fungi of this colour in Radnorshire or the rest of the UK, but they certainly stand out where they do grow. This is the verdigris roundhead, a scarce woodland edge fungi and when it is young, the cap is even bluer. As it ages, the blue fades and it becomes quite green. Slimy when young, as the cap matures it becomes very sticky.
Picture and description borrowed from Radnorshire Wildlife Trust Facebook page.
Wow. That is something I never knew existed! Diolch!
Mae’r dail yn troi…tipyn bach o lliwiau hydref. The leaves are turning…a little bit of autumn color:
gwich iawn - really great.
I have not seen this species (stropharia aeruginosa) for three years, despite knowing where they grow.
Taith Margaret - Margaret’s journey.
Cheers J.P.
Wow. I would love to spot these @theresacorbett. I keep looking.
In a stark contrast these from my garden. Aptly named “ugly milkcaps”.
Lactarius turpis. Cap llaeth hyll.
& a pretty visitor. Ymwelydd del. Deserving of a prettier name.
Grey wagtail. Siglen lwyd.
All our wagtails seem to be pied! (brith?)
The berries look lovely but make sure that you spit out the pips!
Lovely autumn colour in Cymru today.
Waxcap. Cap cwyr. Probably scarlet (because it’s the most common of the red ones).
Wow!