22 September
During our recent visit to Hamilton Wetlands and Forest the threatening weather held off. There's been enough rain to nurture a variety of fungi, but the woods still look dry, the deciduous bracken ferns have dried, and the water level in the Marsh continues to sink. We've had two reports of bear sightings in recent weeks. Although we've yet to see one, there is certainly evidence of their activity in the Forest. They're pulling bark off trees and tearing stumps apart in search of grubs. A variety of fungi have emerged. Some mushrooms in groups, some singly or in pairs. Brittlegills, as is true of many of the genus russula , are strikingly coloured. A panther agaric was just emerging. Miniscule mushrooms emerge from fir cones. Two new species of polypore (to me, at least) have appeared. I stand to be corrected, but I think this is Dyer's polypore--apparently emerging from the ground, from the root of a nearby conifer. Red-belted conks appear in a variety