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Saturday, December 31, 2011

27th December 2011 --- Weekly Volunteers


Present:

Ron and Martin

Activities:

- went round the North West boundary checking for any storm damage
- Found the split fir tree mentioned last week by visitors.
This is near the Cricket pitch in cricket Pitch Wood.
It is safe, and rather attractive for viewing the construction of a trees wood.
We took off the odd snag that could possibly poke into an eye.
It is largely on the ground except at the base end which props the main trunk
In a horizontal position.  If this 'propping' rots away the trunk will
probably sink slowly to the ground.
- moved the brash pile in the corner of South Heath acros the road,
and had a bonfire on the established patch behind
the cottages.

Observations:

- Redpolls


Martin

20th December 2011 --- Weekly Volunteers


Present:
John, Alan, David, Jonathan, Keith, and Martin

Activities :

- cut marked trees along beeches avenue
- bonfire of brash

Observations :

- crossbill, redpoll, longtailed tit, marsh tit
- new dam needs attention
- visitor reported new split/fallen tree near cricket pitch.
Away from trails, but will need inspecting sometime.

Martin

13th December 2011 --- Weekly Volunteers


Present:

John, Keith, Jonathan, David, Ron, Neil,  Mike, Alan and Martin.

Activities :

- after gales on Monday night, checked the main paths for damage.  2 birches
cleared away, one along the top and one near Jilly's house.  The first was a
dead tree collapsing, the other a healthy tree that snapped at roots.  The latter
fell on the secondary bit of fence, and sometime a little repair job will be needed.
- checked the new pond, which survived the storm and the increased stream flow.
- coppiced some willow by stream.  This had given too much shade.
- had two small bonfires finishing the brash by the stream.
- tidied up the pine logs and made safe.
- felled some marked trees along beeches avenue.  Brash left between paths.


Observations :

- Raven
- Fieldfare
- redpolls
- goldfinch
- crossbill

Other:
- david trod on hidden bit of rusted iron fence post remains, which went through the sole of his walking boots, and cut his foot.  Cleaned up and bandaged.  Concern waas whether tetanus jabs upto date or not.  He was despatched to A&E for attention., under his own steam after coffee.

Martin.

6th December 2011 --- Weekly Volunteers


Present:

John, Alan, Ron, Neil, Jonarhan, Pat, Keith and Martin

Activities:

- bonfire of second half of brash by 13th pond
- cut 4 marked pine and a birch further down stream
- completed main parts of pond dam.  Some leakages to be plugged another time.
- dug up and burned a Rhodey
- inspected marked trees along beeches avenue

- Observations :

- Raven
- 25 Crossbill
- longtailed tit, redpoll, tree creeper
- 2 buzzards
- orange peel fungi near roller stand
- dead pigmy shrew on road

Martin

29th November 2011 --- Weekly Volunteers


Present:

John, Neil, Jonathan, Alan, Pat, David, and Martin

Activities:

- burnt half the brash near 13rh pond
- cut two more marked pine down
- built a new dam on the stream just below 13th. Used a new method as the base
was pretty rocky.  Constructed effectively an irish bridge with a sloping front, and
them a log damn leaning on this, with mud to finish.  Will see how it is doing next week.
- cleared weed from mmuddy pond

Observations:

- large tit flock, wth coal, longtail, blue, goldcrest
- very windy outside the valley
- lots of fungi still


Martin

22nd November 2011 --- Weekly Volunteers


Present:

John, Ron, Neil, Johnathan, Mike, Alan, Keith, Martin, and David

Activities :
- cut more pines down near 13th pond
- made the logs secure
- looked at site for possible new pond

Observations :

- Raven
- woodcock
- goldcrest, long tailed tits, treecreeper
- meadow pipits
- jay
- jackdaw
- redpolls, fieldfare

Martin

15th November 2011 --- Weekly Volunteers


Present:

John, Neil, Ron, Mike, David and Martin

Activities:

- cuttung down yellow marked pine and birch near 13th pond.
- Brash piled for future bonfire,
- logs made safe and will be left to rot.

Observations :

- siskins, redpolls
- sparrow hawks
- even more fungi
- red admiral
- tawny owl
- crossbill
- buck calling
- nice bright cool day

Martin

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Great grey shrike

I had good views of a g g shrike on south heath today.  It was moving quite quickly from one tree top to another, having a good look round from its vantage points.  So actively hunting.

The meadow pipits seemed to object.  I did not see the shrike actually make any attack.

It disappeared as miraculously as it appeared, and I have no idea which direction it was going in.

Seemed to be quite happy with the tops of both birch and pine.

I wondered quite why the bird is the colour it is, since it really sticks out in the pine trees.  I wondered if it only really bothered to hunt in the direction away from the sun, thereby its colour being against the sky and into the sun from the prey's point of view.

found another patch of nail fungus as well today, without looking very seriously, so maybe there are even more coming out.

martin


Monday, November 14, 2011

8th November 2011 -- weekly volunteers


Present:

John, Jonathan, Pat, Neil, Keith, David, Alan and Martin


Activities:

- day started off wet drizzle, so we cut all the logs from inside the tool store
- brought some more in from the back
- disposed of one of the plastic sheets covering the log pile as it was starting to split badly
- went to 13th pond and continued tree felling of yellow spots
- had a look at the chainsaw work at batters clump

Observations :

- big flock of lesser redpolls (say 50)
- crossbills
- lots of fieldfare and redwings.
- sparrowhawk
- lots of fungi now


Martin

10th Nov 2011 - count of Nail Fungus

I did a rather more thorough count and got to 12 'clumps', that is associated with a single defecation.  Some were in several parts of the 'clumps'.

A large number were really very small and young, so there may be a repeat of last winters amazing appearances.

Martin

Final List of Fungi for 2011

Here is the final version of Rays list of fungi seen in October.  59 species now

martin


click here for document

Monday, November 7, 2011

1st November 2011 -- weekly volunteers


Present :

John, Jonathan, Neil, Mike, Pat, David and Martin


Activities:

- wired the new part of the causeway
- resurfaced and mended sides of main cause way
- cleared weed out of the first pond downstream of causeway
- went to 'owl' wood below the high beeches, and took down a number of yellow spotted
   birch.  Three brash piles and one pile of four foots.
- pulled a few pine saplings nearby
- said hello to the chain saw training gang

Observations :

- reed bunting, crossbills, skylarks, siskins
- herring gull, meadow pipit, treecreepers, longtail tits
- redpolls
- common darter 2, southern hawker 2, red admiral
- more fungi
- buck with only one big horn
- fabulous day
- all damsons now gone
- John wanting to cut more pines by river next week

Martin

26th July 2011 --- weekly volunteers

wet in the morning, and those that came, went shortly after.

Martin

August 2nd 2011 -- weekly Vounteers

Present:

Mike, Antony, Martin, Lee, Alan, David, Ron, and Keith

Activities:

- cleared up logs and brash around the tools store, that resulted from the pollarding
   of the beeches for the purposes of the photovoltaic panels on the roof.  Brash put
   into the wooded area, the logs added to our pile.  Some bigger logs left and were
   subsequently picked up by the contractors.
- Cleared a big Ragwort on route to car park, and refilled the leaflets
- pulling bracken and Birch on the South Heath, including scything.
- took some new people to see sundews and the poisoned land on OL1
- lookered the ponies

martin

Sunday, November 6, 2011

19th July 2011 -- weekly volunteers

Present:

Mike, John, Antony, Martin, David, Ron, Neil, Jill, and Lee

Activities:

- Lookered the Ponies
- cut down some birch both sides of the road
- tidied up log pile, cutting up manageable sweet chestnut logs
- bracken work on south heath, including scything
- puled ragwort in the cess pit area of South Heath.
- collected up some bark chips into bags
- did a survey of some of the ponds on the reserve

Observations:

- Ravens
- Adder
- Azures, small reds, keeled skimmer, Golden Ring, Common Darter, Emperor,
- brown chaser, BB chaser


Martin


16th August 2011 -- weekly volunteers


Present:

Martin, John, Lee, Mike, Katherine, Antony,  Pat and David

Activities:

- cleared Cricket pitch ragwort, with plants being covered with brash in the OL2 wood
- pulled up saplings and small trees of Birch and Pine on the sides of the path towards the
  cross roads, on the plateau
- lookered the Ponies
- at the Cross roads, pulled some more saplings of  birch and pine
- Mike did some Scything of  bracken
- filled some bags of peat from below the roller stand, and these were taken by David off site
- cut down Two marked birch on south heath plus a bit of pollarding of previously pollarded trees
- Brash hauled to the corner, ready for the fire site the other side of the road

Observations:

- Gorse mite on road
- Dodder in usual place
- Hobby
- Raven

Martin

9th August 2011 -- weekly volunteers



Present:

 John, Martin, Neil, Keith, Antony, Jill, Andrew, Mike, Alan, David, and  Katherine

Activities:

- Ponies moved from south Heath onto the main reserve.  All went fine, with just one sweep
- Pulled up sapling  birch and pine at the cross roads
- and pulled some Bracken on open ground beneath slope
- Made safe a birch branch that had broken opposite the slope
- Cut down two birch on south heath plus some small ones
- Neil cut some wood in tool store

Observations:

- Sundews, asphodel


23rd August 2011 -- Weekly Volunteers


Present:

John, Ron, Neil, Martin, Mike, Keith and Antony

Activities:

- Wet, and so rather restricted to near the tool store.  Went quite early
- Cut logs in tool store
- Repaired sharpened large bow saw
- Mike took gorse in South Heath
- Mike returned repaired lopper and small mattock
- Felled and process marked birches on South Heath in the corner with the new nest boxes
- searched for ponies, but failed.  Not too surprising and no big worry
- Martin took some cut wood, john took some big logs

Observations:

- Recently 2 raven, 3 crossbill, hobby
- gorse mite along road on right


Martin

occasional notes for 26th september 2010

observations

- Don has started removing some of his logs.
- looks as if he is using a new forwarder to do this.  Bruunett.
- This is parked down from the water trough
- There was a gathering of some sort under the high beeches, of about 10 persons.  Was this religious in some way?  If anyone has information I would like to know, as the reserve management should be consulted beforehand.

martin

7th June 2011 ... weekly volunteers

Present:
John, Neil, Keith, Pat, Mike, Katherine, Anthony, Alan (new), Mike (new) and Martin

Activities:
- The second half of the last nest box survey done.
- lookered ponies
- put up the box that had fallen in the swamp.
- the path across top heath had quite a lot of birch lining it on both sides,  This and bracken and pine saplings completely cleared.  Mike used his scythe on bracken in various places.
- Ragwort on the cricket pitch, both sides, cleared and hidden under brash in the OL2 wood.
- more road works on the M1 and some bracken clearing along the main bank and sides of the wood.  Cleared out some of the existing channels, which seem to be doing their job.

Observations:
- slow worm under one of the corrugated sheets
- Turtle dove heard in two parts of the reserve
- virtually all boxes successful, and only one disaster.
- b.b.chasers. azures and large reds
- dodder now has some flowers on it.
- treecreepers, buzzard


Martin

Monday, October 31, 2011

13th September 2011 -- Weekly Volunteers


- Windy sunny with showers, both forecast and correct  Not nice and day short



Present:

John, Pat, Neil, Ron, Mike and Martin
Martin late after appointment

Activities:

-  road works on m1
- cut down small birch on m1
- marked out edge for remaining road work
- sapling Birches near batter's clump
- cut down three small birch in pines, being the source of saplings
- checked fire beaters at cricket pitch.  2 definitely need immediate repair.
    took 2 away to be replaced/mended
- pulled up bramble in ditch and bracken behind tool store
- pollarded birch along road
- filled 3 bags of bark,

- things not done because of bad weather and early departure.
    Ring barking,  switch off water, collect dung,  cut gorse


News:

- archaeologist plan
- ring barking ok
- restrict pollarding to edges
- road to go ahead
- no scraping
- finding felling contractor, but difficult
- new neighbours at top lodge
- returned angle grinder via paul's helper



observations:

2 ravens
Hobby calling
Meadow pipits moving
Lots of chaffinches on beech mast


Pat took 5 bags of bark
Ron took 2 bags ballast


Martin

20th September 2011 -- Weekly Volunteers


Present:

John, Alan, Lee, Mike, David, Martin and Jonathan

Activities:

- made safe hanging branch over path near stoney pond.  Took out another branch that was getting too low
- cleared birch saplings at exit from tree tunnel
- cleared some birch from the bad patch
- cleaned nestboxes in vicinity .  3 had bees/ bumble bees, one with lots of horse hair, the other with dung!
- inspected pillow mound and then it started raining

Observations :

- raven
- meadow pipits
- siskins, redpolls, bullfinches
- kestrel
- swallows
- fungi ..  lots
- 3 woodlarks
and
- signing card for Antony, who has moved to Hastings area


Martin

25th October 2011 -- Weekly Volunteers


Present:

 Lee, Alan, Pat, Neil, John, Keith, Martin, Jonathan and David

Activities:

- finished mending m1
- replaced the 2 mended firebeater.  Thanks to Mike for mending them.
- helped collect birch log piles behind cottage and along reynards way for Alan's friend
- cut gorse along road, making gaps for deer to browse. Brash mostly under oak tree, but
   with some along the path
- collected dozen bags of dung for John

Observations:

- saw nail and burnt pine fungus
- saw two nice gorse mite colonies
- meadow pipit, 9 woodlark, fieldfare, flock of redwing
- crossbill, redpoll
- raven
- big buck on m1, small buck near cuckoo pond
- red admiral by wood pile

Martin

18th October 2011 -- Weekly volunteers


Present:

John, Mike, Alan, David, and Martin


Activities:

-- made an irish bridge from the south bank to the island. Cut yellow
   spotted trees, brash  and bracken.  Still needs wiring.  operational
   now for deer etc
- made start of a berm down stread from new bridge.
- noted that causeway needs more road surface sometime

Observations:

- crossbill, siskins , redpolls
- jackdaw
- interesting fungus, like a black orange peel
- woodlark


Martin

11th October 2011 -- Weekly Volunteers


Present :

John, Alan, Ron, Neil, David, Keith, Jonathan, Pat, and Martin

Activities :

- cutting more pine with yellow spots near 13th pond
- finished clearing weed from pond
- ring barking a few pine to break up lines near stream.  Principle of allowing
   more light through for the dragon flies.
- switched off the water to the water troughs.  We did not drain.  Need to
   reconsider when Cattle come

Observations :

- 9 woodlark in flock.  Some singing during day
- siskins, redpoll, crossbill
- 2 types of caterpillar, one a looper, the other not
- 4 swallows plus
- common darter, migrant and southern hawkers
- meadow pipit, skylark
- herring gull
- damsons all taken


Martin

4th October 2011 -- Weekly volunteers


Present :

John, Lee, Alan, Pat, Keith, Mike, David and Martin

Activities:

- cleared nestboxes in first half of circuit
- felled some yellow spotted pines shading 13th pond
- ring barked a couple of birches at ditto
- added some logs to dam
- dredged out west end of pond onto dam

Observations:

- raven, masses of redpoll and siskins
- woodlarks, including family party of 8 at west pond
- male young kestrel on stream
- crossbills
- meadow pipit, tree creeper
- a bat in one nest box, plenty of bumble bee nests which were left
- damsons next week
- alan wanting some logs
- david's friend wanting dung from mike's contact

Martin

27 September 2011 -- Weekly Volunteers


Present :

John, Ron, Neil, Alan, Keith, Mike, Jonathan, Pat and martin

Activities :

- cleared nestboxes back to high beeches.  Some bumble bees in residence, which
   we left if we spotted them in time.
- ring barked some trees near stream source
- cut bracken near bench and along the wood
- cleared some pine saplings along reynards way
- hot work and left a bit early

Observations:

- 2+ woodlarks
- Crossbills
- cauliflower fungus
- patches of gorse mite
- skylark
- meadow pipits, siskins, tree creeper, stonechat
- Sparrow hawk, kestrel, tawny owl
- Common darter, southern hawker
- house martins

martin

Sunday, October 30, 2011

28th October 2011 Bird Count

please find below link to the bird count spreadsheet

please click to get the spreadsheet

Lots of birds, including new winter arrivals.  Crossbills seemed to be everywhere.  Stonechats appeared to have upped and gone.  But Woodlark are still in many places.

36 species, with plenty of gaps.  The numbers were bolstered by Peregrine, Herring gull and Heron.  All seem within a few yards.

Not so many siskins, but masses of Lesser Redpoll, which got very difficult to count reliably as they were flying around a lot.  Similarly the longtail tits, though I must say that I have never seen so many at Old Lodge before.

Martin

22nd July 2011 Bird Count

Please find below link to the bird count spread sheet.

please click to get spreadsheet

Very few birds around, but nice to see a few less common ones.  Tawny, Spotted Flycatcher, Turtle Dove.

I guess we get blasé about the Redstarts, Crossbills, stonechats.

martin

27th August 2011 Bird count

Find below link to the full spreadsheet of the bird count.

click here for bird count spreadsheet

Only 36 species, and low numbers.  Presumably moulting leads to many birds hiding away at this time of year.

Plenty of interest in Ravens, Hobby, buzzard.

Mistle Thrushes are now gathering, and we get up to 50 on the reserve.

Martin

22nd September 2011 Bird Count

Below is a link to the bird count records

click for the spreadsheet

40 species was not too bad, with plenty of moving migrants.

Swallows, martins, chiffchaffs and meadow pipits.

Stonechats were recorded in good numbers, presumably with a second or third brood.

Crossbill, Ravens, Sparrow hawk are nice on top.

Martin

Fungus Foray on 21st October 2011

Ray's Fungus Foray at Old Lodge 21st October 2011

Below is a link to the preliminary results of the day.  We had some good things, but rather few in number.

martin

click to get the document

Or a rougher cut and paste copy is here.  Sorry, I am not good at getting the format translated properly.



Fungus Survey at Old Lodge LNR 21st. October 2011


Site Name Old Lodge LNR
Grid ref. TQ469306 57 species found
Date 21 October 2011
Recorder Ray Tantram



Species Description Status Edibility
Amanita citrina False death cap lemon tints to whitish cap with lemon velar C *
patches, white gills, stem and volva; smell of
raw potato in bruised stem base

Amanita fulva Tawny grisette "pie-crust" margin to tawny cap Baggy volva. C *
No ring.

Amanita rubescens Blusher reddish-brown cap with velar warts, white gills C P
and stem. Bruises red esp. on stem base

Bjerkandera adusta thin bracket with grey pores C *

Bolbitius titubans (vitellinus) chrome-yellow cap, viscid ,dark gills grows in C *
grass clippings, straw and other debris

Boletus (Suillus) bovinus viscid cinnamon (Jersey cow) cap, pores, C E
stem; angular compound pores darken with
age, esp. with Scots Pine (sometimes with Gomphideus roseus)

Boletus badius Bay bolete chestnut cap, similar stem, lemon-yellow C E
large pores bruise blue. Conifer and BL

Boletus edulis Penny bun chestnut brown cap with pale margin, pale U E
network on stem

Calocera cornea small gold (mainly) 'fingers' with unbranched C *
tips on deciduous stumps

Claviceps purpurea Ergot of rye purple-black 'rice grains' on grains and C P
grasses, causes 'St. Anthony's Fire' and
gangrene when harvested on cereal crops

Clavulinopsis helvola solitary or in small tufts, orange-yellow simple O *
'fingers' woods or grassland

Coprinus sp. an ink-cap                  Here tiny, ephemeral, one of several such on Pony dung

Cortinarius sp. impossible to identify beyond genus * *

Cystoderma amianthinum tawny cap with mealy surface, similar O *
'stocking' on stem below ring

Entoloma conferendum *1 Dark brown shiny cap, striate margin, silvery O P
fibrils lining stem, greyish-pink gills, mealy
smell, grasslands, short turf, woods. Distinctive spores identify


Ganoderma australe (adspersum) an artists fungus brown thick bracket, no white streaks in context C *
(flesh)

Gymnopilus penetrans gold to tawny cap, gills and stem, gills C *
spotting rusty, on woody stumps and debris

Handkea (Calvatica) excipuliformis Pestle puffball long-stalked puffball C *

Hebeloma crustuliniforme Poison pie; Fairy cakes brownish cap, clay-coloured gills, smell of C P
radish

Hygrocybe coccinea Scarlet hood scarlet/blood bell-shaped red cap, yellow gills O *
going blood red with yellow edge, in grassland

Hygrocybe conica Conical waxcap yellow-orange very conical cap, yellow gills, C *
blackening on bruising and with age (syn. with
 H. nigricans), in grass

Hygrocybe virginea Snowy waxcap      white, going beigy, broad decurrent gills, in grass * E

Hygrophoropsis aurantiaca False chanterelle bright orange, with (true) very decurrent gills, C P
under conifers and BL trees

Hypholoma fasciculare Sulphur tuft grows on stumps in profusion, sulphur- C P
coloured gills darken as purplish spores
mature

Ischnoderma benzoinum *2 dark-capped quite hard, bracket-like polypore U *
resp. on conifer/ BL, mainly beech. Here the soft. immature leptoid form found

Kuehneromyces mutabilis golden-brown caps, margins drying paler; C *
grows in tufts on stumps(can be confused with
poisonous Galerina marginata)

Laccaria laccata Deceiver pinky-rose-brown, 3 different gill lengths; very C E
variable

Lactarius camphoratus *3 Curry milkcap red-brown cap, watery white milk, smell of * *
curry when dry. These were the old tawny ones which gave no milk

Lactarius hepaticus small dark (liver) coloured, white milk dries C *
bright yellow on handkerchief, (only)under pine

Lactarius pyrogalus Firemilk funnel-shaped dingy grey/fawn cap, orange C *
gills, white milk, goes yellow with KOH, under
hazel

Leccinum (Boletus) scabrum group Brown birch bolete brownish cap, pale pores, creamy striate stem C E
stippled with brown dots(several sub-species)

Mycena epipterigia delicate species, fawn/yellow cap, pale sub- C *
decurrent gills, glutinous, pale yellow viscid
spindly stem, in grass or moss on heaths,

Mycena galericulata Bonnet mycena quite large for a bonnet cap, tan colour, gills C *
often interlinked at lower cap surface, grows   
on wood

Mycena vitilis 'snapping bonnet' small bonnet cap, pale greyish-brown. C *
"whippy" stem (unusual for this genus, most
are fragile)

Otidea/Peziza sp. *4 woodland fire-site cup fungus. To be identified by expert


Panaeolus sp. a mottle gill very dark conical cap, very dark mottled gills, * *
long stem, Here on dung

Parasola (Coprinus) plicatilis Japanese umbrella small, greyish white cap with red-brown O *
centre, radial striations to cap, dark gills and
spores, in grassland

Paxillus involutus Brown roll rim inrolled margin when young, soft decurrent C P
gills easily bruised. gills can be folded up in a
roll up from stem, grows with Birch

Poronia punctata  *5 Nail fungus Tiny tan to beige shallow stalked cups 10- R *
15mm [ONLY on dung of New Forest Ponies].
Very rare. Here on Exmoor Pony dung. Young fresh material

Psilocybe semilanceata Liberty cap, ‘magic mushroom small,tan conical cap with umbo, tall thin dingy C P
stem, clay gills darken, grows in grass
halluciogenic- bad trip!

Rhizina undulata *6 Pine fire fungus chestnut brown to black cushions joining into O *
one another, causes serious rot, often found
after fires (Brentmoor Heath)

Rhodocollybia (Collybia) maculata Foxy spot quite robust, creamy, with red-brown spotting C *
of cap and gills, fibrous stem, in leaf litter can
grow in rings

Rickenella fibula tiny, yellow-orange, darker in cap centre, C *
decurrent gills in damp grass and moss

Russula betularum small pale reddish wishy-washy cap colours, C *
under birch(hot taste)

Russula claroflava Yellow swamp  russula clear yellow, no greyish tints on stem, damp O *
places, mainly under birch

Russula emetica Sickener bright red cap, white gills and stem, under C P
conifers

Russula vesca Bare-toothed russula pastel to darker tints in cap,  gills protrude C *
beyond cap margin, salmon reaction with Fe,
under BL trees

Schizopora paradoxa creamy white raised resupinate patches on C *
dead twigs, pores often maze-like

Scleroderma citrinum Common earthball growing at path edges, thick "skin" pulled C P
together at base, virtually no "stem" foetid
smell when cut

Sparassis crispa Cauliflower fungus creamy, convoluted, at base of Scots pine, O E
which it kills

Steccherinum ochraceum an aphyllo. mainly resupinate, forming orangey spiny * *
patches, within white growth zones, on dead    
wood, mainly BL (esp. beech)

Stereum hirsutum Hairy stereum thin overlapping bracket, smooth golden C *
(lower) fertile surface

Stropharia semiglobata Dung roundhead hemispherical viscid yellow cap, purple-black C *
spores, yellowish stem, ring zone

Thelephora terrestris Carpet fungus, earthfan soft 'furry' bracket-like, on soil or stumps, C *
spiny spores

Trametes (Coriolus) versicolor Many-coloured bracket thin bracket, creamy pores, grows in tiers on C *
dead wood

Trochila ilicina Discomycete growing on Holly leaves * *

Tylopilus (Boletus) felleus *7 Bitter Bolete Chamois leather cap, dry matt (cracking ) O P
pinkish pores , dingy brown network on stem
under Beech & oak -acid soils very bitter!

Notes:
Status: Common, Occasional, Uncommon, Rare
Edibility: Edible, Poisonous, * no comment

*1  ‘LBJ’ Sara Shepley suggested looking at Entolomas, a pink-spored genus. My spore examination confirmed this species, a first record for the site.
*2 Leptoid stage, first found in 2009 survey when both this and mature fomitoid stage recorded
*3 Identified by Sara Shepley from its characteristic curry smell, at its most powerful on dried material
*4 This will be given to Brian Spooner (recently retired Head of Mycology, Kew) on Sunday, [He goes into Kew 2days/wk!]
*5 Finding such young fresh material demonstrates an ongoing active presence at the site. Will push for FRDBI inclusion!
*6 First collection of this (destructive!) species, which appears shortly after heath fires
*7 First collection of this ‘Occasional-Uncommon species  

Ray Tantram 28th. October 2011