103/366: Orange Giant Zinnia
104/366: Puff-Topped Creamy Echinacea
105/366: Jumping Spider Derriere
106/366: Heart of an Orange Cupped Daffodil
107/366: Lovely Frond
108/366: Purple Hollyhock
109/366: Mushrooms in Love (+2 in notes)
110/366: Dazzling Daffodil Display
111/366: Sapling Pine Growing in Oak Tree
112/366: Aster Petal Edges
113/366: Amazing Pink and Orange Echinacea (+1 in…
114/366: Manzanita Buds (+3 in notes)
115/366: Braveheart Spectacular
116/366: Jumping Spider with a Molly Hair
117/336: Magical Fuzzy Mushroom
118/366: Classic 1964 Chevy Impala Emblem
119/366: Touch Me!
120/366: Yellow-Tinge Larkspur Bud (+1 in a note)
121/366: Mini Crab Spider on Rose Petal
122/366: Lovely African Daisies (+1 in a note)
123/366: Just the Gills (+1 in a note)
124/366: Beauty Lurks Inbetween the Shadows
125/366: Prayer Stone Stacks
101/366: Coral Bells Blossom
100/365: Yellow Gladiolus
99/366: Mottled Rose
98/366 The Big Dipper and the Moon
97/366: Dried Leaf
96/366: Textured Rose
95/366: We Are Family
94/366: Visiting Carpet Beetle
93/366: Morning Glory Candy Cane
92/366: Pearly Classic
91/366: Pink Coneflower in a Sea of Flower Bokeh
90/366: Fledgling Maple Bat
89/366: Elegance (+1 inset)
88/366: Together
87/366: Bright and Cheery Monkeyflower
86/366: Forget-Me-Not Moth (+1 picture in a note)
85/366: Poppy with Droplets (+1 in a note)
84/366: Wild Grass Close-Up
83/366: Suspended
82/366: Beautiful Coccoon
81/366: Moss Covered with Droplets
80/366: Moist Mushrooms
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102/366: Super-Cluster of Tiny Mushrooms...I think


Back in November, 2012, I discovered this tiny, weird blobby thing on a log and I took a bunch of pictures, hoping it might be interesting once I saw it on the computer. When I looked at the images on my monitor, I could hardly believe my eyes! I have never seen any fungus like this before, nor since. It appears to be dozens and dozens of spaghetti-thin mushrooms, all clinging together...but maybe it's just one odd fungus? I don't think so though. It's certainly fascinating...if you can verify what this is I'd love to know!!
Chris10, , ROL/Photo, and 9 other people have particularly liked this photo
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I was sent a photo of a similar cluster from a good contact friend in Malasia, the 'Unknown were Red' I was asked if I could tell her what they were, Not Fungi, but the eggs of the 'Apple snail'.
Apple snails originated in South America but nowadays can be found more or less anywhere provided conditions are ok, they invaded U S A via Florida.
Pomacea canaliculata, common name the channeled applesnail, is a species of large freshwater snail with gills and an operculum, an aquatic gastropod mollusk in the family Ampullariidae, the apple snails. South American in origin, this species is considered to be in the top 100 of the "World's Worst Invasive Alien Species".
John.
are you ok?
hugs
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