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Ramaria Stricta

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 A big part of mushroom photography for me is the diversity of colors and textures as well as the composition and creation of visual interest. If the photograph invokes a smell of moist forest floor, even better. In these images you can see the green leaves of alpine strawberries, the fallen leaves of beech and oak trees, as well as some fern and moss. These photographs were taken in a forest in Germany in a predominantly beech deciduous forest after a rainy afternoon. The lighting is dim but I was able to grab the photo just about with tolerable grain. The mushroom here was identified via the integrated smartphone functionality for identifying plants and it came up as Ramaria Stricta, the strict-branch coral. Follow this link for additional information on this cosmopolitan mushroom.

Entoloma Hochstetteri

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Hello and welcome to The Mushroom Daily! Our first ever post is dedicated to a wonderful little blue mushroom which identified as Entoloma Hochstetteri. This happens to also be the National Mushroom of New Zealand and that's just where I had the pleasure to encounter this little fella. I'm lucky enough that my eyes and brain are trained and seemingly talented to pick out any anomalies in regular patterns. I can easily spot a whale plume while driving down the CA 101 or I can easily spot a deer a mile ahead on the hill on the side of the 280. My wife says I'm good at that. Over the years this has established itself as a talent of mine that I believe I actually have. I attribute this talent to the tasks my grandma, who is a seamstress, would give me. Watch out over there somewhere I dropped a needle, can you find it? I always did. And so my gaze gravitated to this little blue thing in the middle of the moss on the side of a trail. FInd out more about this little fella by fol...