MLK Quote

MLK Quote

Nature's Inspiration Movie

http://www.flickspire.com/m/HealthierL433/NaturesInspiration -- Nature's Inspiration Movie: The photographs in this short video are from award-winning photographer, Ken Jenkins, and they are breathtaking. However, this video is much more than beautiful photographs! Peggy Anderson has compiled beautiful quotations from the likes of Emerson, Thoreau, and many others that truly capture the beauty of nature and solitude. Absolute must watch for nature lovers.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

My Little Umbrellas

I would like to apologize for blurry pictures of this post. I am linking this post with Rambling Woods Nature Notes meme. There are lots of little umbrellas, aka mushrooms, in my garden now after the torrential three inch rainfall in 30 minutes which happened yesterday (July 1).

Mushrooms are the fruits (fruiting body) of the fungus (just like apples are the fruits of the apple trees). They contain the spores from which future mushrooms will be born. They typically have a stem, a cap and a gill (or spores) under the cap, though there are mushrooms which might not stem or cap or gills.



We see only the fruit -- the mushroom -- but we do not see the vegetative body of the fungus. This vegetative body is known as mycelium and looks like a large of mat of fine threads or spider web. While digging soil, if you ever come across a thin whitish filament like structure, then that is a mycelium. The mycelium can be a small structure; or it can stretch into miles. The largest mycelium or fungus, in the world, is found in Oregon -- it covers an area of 2400 acres before a road cut through it.



You should be happy if you see mushroom growing in your garden. Unless you have pets (cats/dogs) which graze in the garden or toddlers who pick things up and put them in their mouth, do not destroy the mushroom. Sign of mushroom means you have a very healthy soil in which trees and plants can easily root and grow without any care. Fungi play an integral part in nature. They break down complex organic compounds of fats, carbohydrates and proteins into the most basic elements that can be used and absorbed by other organisms (for gardeners, it's the plants and trees). Plants and trees have symbiotic relation with fungi; the roots of plants and trees cannot directly absorb the nutrients as those molecules are large and complex to be absorbed. The fungus break those nutrients into simpler and tiny elements; the roots then absorb those nutrients, convert part of it in sugar and put back the sugar into the fungus. The fungus then thrive on those sugar.



Many scientists believe that fungi are responsible for creating forest and old growth. Fungus appeared on earth about 1500 million years ago, much before any land-plant appeared (land plants appeared about 700 million years ago). Fungi not only break up complex molecules but they also secret acidic and other substance which slowly breaks up rocks and stones into soil (we all know and have seen mushrooms forming on woods and slowly that wood will be broken up to become compost). Over years, the action of fungus turn that soil into rich humus-filled, matted soil on which large trees grow and spread, thus creating the old-growth forest. Scientists also believe that fungi and trees are responsible for the evolution of life form on earth. Fungus came; created soil on which plants evolved. As more plants evolved, spread and covered the earth, carbon-dioxide content in the atmosphere decreased; at the same time oxygen content increased. This created a perfect atmosphere for the appearance of other animals. In fact so much different varieties of animals appeared in about 530 million years ago that scientists call that era as the Cambrian Explosion Era. So, WE OWE OUR EXISTENCE TO PLANTS, NOT ONLY BECAUSE THEY PROVIDE FOOD, SHELTER, MEDICINE TO US BUT WITHOUT THEM PERHAPS WE WERE NEVER GOING TO BE EVOLVED.

Paul Stamets listed six-ways mushroom (fungi) can save the world. Watch this fascinating video, appearing in TED-Talks, HERE. Many of the mushrooms growing in our garden are also edible, but PLEASE DO NOT TRY it unless you are an expert in identifying them -- eating poisonous mushroom can result in death.

14 comments:

  1. Interesting and educational post KL - I've no time to watch the video right now but will be back to follow link when I've more time (off too work shortly).
    I've currently got little patches of fungi growing on old logs under a hedge and a little colony growing under a Hosta in a pot.
    Great advice not to eat - they are terribly difficult too identify.
    That's some rain fall - it's currently raining here in Scotland too!

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  2. Thanks for all your info! Love it a lot. I always look for mushrooms after a good rain, too.

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  3. Good legal disclaimer at the end - i once heard that years ago an entire family was gone after eating mushrooms during a picnic.
    I hate, hate, hate when silly people will look at the rain outside, an overcast sky and say "oh, what an awful day, what dreary day". Is rain dreary, is it somehow conducive to depressing thoughts? No! Only simple, unintellectual people complain like that. At work, i hear it all the time. And i always counter with "rain brings greenery to the scenery" and "what if it never rained? We should be thankful". And the whiners are the type whose outdoor time is wholly comprised of walking to and from their cars. Thanks for giving a "shout-out" to the recent rains. Rain is good, always. And if the sewers back up and roads wash out for a while, well, that's our fault because we paved over millions of square miles of beautiful pure soil.

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  4. We certainly have plenty of mushrooms that pop up in our garden. Partly because we have tree stumps that were not removed.

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  5. How interesting! I enjoyed Paul Stamet's discourse, too. Thanks for the link!

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  6. Great post... I did not know all this and the TED talk was wonderful.... Michelle from Nature Notes...

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  7. I've got fungi growing on one of the beds in the polytunnel. I think it's growing from the farmyard manure I put there. Hopefully it won't take over.

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  8. Thanks for looking into those little 'umbrellas'. Your findings are so interesting! Glad to read of such facts about fungi. Thank you. Btw, love your pictures as well!

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  9. Hi KL, fungi are quite interesting microorganisms, aren't they? In my garden I usually only get to see the mushrooms in fall or winter when it is more humid and we have more rain. Maybe the fungi need these conditions to build their fruit? The mushroom population increased after I amended the soil with tons of compost and worm castings. I assume that the soil has become healthier and the fungi like that :-).
    Christina

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  10. What a great informative post. I love finding mushrooms al over the garden...so unique and I know they mean everything is healthy!!

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  11. I love to eat mushrooms but I buy those I have for dinner :-) I have lots of different mushrooms in my garden every autumn and early winter every year so I suppose I have the right environment for them.

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  12. I have several mushrooms sprouting in my garden right now thanks to all the rain. I never knew they were a sign of healthy soil. Great post! :o)

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  13. I'm always a bit cautious about Mushrooms as I don't know enough about them. Wish I knew more...

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  14. though I have observed that there are some mushrooms that grow from my pet's pee, yikes, i guess theyre still reminders that my land is good and healthy!

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