A visit to the suq, Doha, Qatar, 1967
Colours
Disappearing mountains
Dotted Blazingstar / Liatris punctata
Green + light
Blue Jay
Hawkweed
Magnificent Peyto Lake
Cherry-faced Meadowhawk
The white hairs of old age
Fiery Fireweed in its fall colours
Prickly Lettuce / Lactuca serriola
Suq and gathering place, Doha, Qatar, 1967
They always look so serious
Mourning Dove / Zenaida macroura
Pretty Miss Blue Eyes
Native Sunflower sp.
Pine Siskin
Hibiscus schizopetalus
Mirror reflection
Heliconius sapho
Love those Alberta Badlands
Spruce Grouse in all her finery
Signs of Fall
Tiny, and one of many
My hiking companion : )
Strawberries and cream fungus
Just for fun
Mountain Death-camas
A break from the rain
Butter-and-eggs
White-crowned Sparrow juvenile
With or without people?
Rain - from the inside
Evening Primrose
Can't beat a Lily
The Cemetery Jackrabbit
Surprise, surprise ... Raspberries in my back yard
We are family
Vibrant
Liverwort
Floral rays
A huddle of Puffballs
Doha suq, Qatar, Middle East, 1967
Looking towards Bow Glacier and Bow Glacier Falls
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Hydnellum caeruleum fungus


I was so thrilled to see this species of fungus (Hydnellum caeruleum) again, when friend Sandy and I went along the Icefields Parkway to Peyto Lake (and a little further, to Mistaya Canyon), on 29 August 2013. I had seen it maybe three or so times before, but it is such a treat to see. So unusual and beautiful. There were several of these all together along the trail to the lake lookout, mixed in with Hydnellum peckii, which I posted the other day. Love the blueish-white droplets that it is oozing. While we were looking at them and I was taking photos, a young guy stopped to see what we were looking at. He, too, took photos. A short while later, we bumped into him at the Peyto Lake lookout and he showed us his hands and fingers that had turned orange. I wondered if he had actually touched the fungus. On our walk back through the forest to the parking lot, I stopped to take a few more photos of them, resting my hands on the ground. Sure enough, I ended up with orange hands, too. Would this be from spores? This specimen may have been something like an inch or less in length, and has "teeth", not gills underneath, which you can see in my photo.
botit.botany.wisc.edu/toms_fungi/aug2003.html
www.mushroomexpert.com/hydnellum_caeruleum.html
botit.botany.wisc.edu/toms_fungi/aug2003.html
www.mushroomexpert.com/hydnellum_caeruleum.html
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