Separate names with a comma.
Here's a site not often seen...a palm leaf covered with snow. This photo of the very hardy (for a palm) Trachycarpus fortunei was taken in Battle...
Pseudohydnum gelatinosum (Toothed Jelly Fungus) Although these dainty mushrooms (average size about 3-5 cm high by about as broad) resemble the...
It's fall, so I thought I would start submitting my mushroom photos again. The Panther Amanita, Amanita pantherina, is a common mushroom of the...
Thanks, Durgan. Matt
Though I dream of perhaps getting a nice digital SLR someday, for now my 4-year old Nikon Coolpix 4300 is the camera I carry on walks in the...
Very true! In fact, the interpretive sign at the garden makes note of its popularity as a cultivated shrub.
Since the red-flowering currants (Ribes sanguineum) are in full-bloom here in southern Washington, I thought I'd share this image I took last week...
Yes, you are right. I have many, many photos from 2004. I didn't even have to go much farther than the local woods to get a lot of good pictures.
I read another thread where someone was requesting more fungi photos. Well, here ya go. This is Gomphus floccosus, a.k.a. Woolly Chanterelle. In...
I took this photo at a local nursery. Korean fir is known to bear cones at young age- these tub specimens were little over a meter high. While I...
Another photo from the Hoyt Arboretum (taken the same day as the mushrooms in the previous thread). They are specimens of Pinus coulteri, a...
For some reason, I can't seem to get the photo attached to this thread. Here is a second attempt.
This mushroom with the mouthful of a scientific name is sometimes called the "western flat-top Agaricus." A member of the same genus as the...
The four-needle pinyon is Pinus quadrifolia I've always know P. quadrifolia as Parry Pinyon, an unusual species with 4 needles to the bundle....