Continuing on with the hunt for fungi!
A funnel spider’s was catching debris. Kinda looked like stars on the ground. 🙂
Maybe with this closer look you can find the spider?
The exuvia! In the first photo you may have noticed it off on the left. The exuvia was quite small (5mm) and the spider only slightly larger.
First snail shell with holes! And it was an empty house.
This was looking straight down on fallen log. Check out the slime mold!
A little closer!
Ok, if above were hard to look at, here it was turned the other way. 🙂 In fact it was a slime mold, White Carnival Candy (Arcyria cinerea ). At least that was my tentative ID. However I did not bring it home to check the spores. It matched photos online, but don’t bet the farm. Furthermore, it does look very similar to another in the same genus, Carnival Candy Slime Mold (Arcyria denudata ) which I have ID before.
Onward we rambled!
The Big City Is Vibrant. Birds There Might Be Getting Less So.
A Distant Spacecraft Has Confirmed That Earth Is Habitable
Survival of the Smartest: Cognitive Skills Linked to Longer Lifespan in Chickadees
Keep looking!
The more you know, the more you see and the more you see, the more you know
I couldn’t find the spider. Really cool slime mold. Y
Very cute little slime molds.
Are you looking at the partial lunar eclipse? It is starting if I am looking correctly. I wasn’t sure if the article was 9:12 eastern or central but I didn’t see anything at 8:15. Mary are you going to take us some pictures?
Just saw it!
Adorable slime mold! Little popsicles!
Saw the lunar eclipse here to – kinda soft & fuzzy
Good to know that the earth is habitable – at least for now!
Steve and I watched the eclipse for a few minutes too. It was a pleasant night with the breeze.
Darling slime mold. Someone had fun naming it