tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8445111183007833890.post5611536301105067538..comments2023-12-30T01:39:18.742+11:00Comments on The House(s) of Fran_mart: Fotos of PhungiFlabmeisterhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00934077052437339591noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8445111183007833890.post-84552577270163280602010-03-10T13:45:13.991+11:002010-03-10T13:45:13.991+11:00A friend who is too paranoid to have a Google acco...A friend who is too paranoid to have a Google account has provided the following helpful comments:<br /><br />"I recognise the first of the fungi on your blog and can offer some guidance on naming. They were really common in the paddocks around Millicent (grazed Eucalypt areas) but I’m sure that they also grew on the edge of the pine forests. They could get quite large and were easy to identify from the yellow undersides. We used to call them ‘big yellow toadstools’ – don’t think that is a botanical name, more likely a very, very, very common name.<br /><br />"Using the same process, I can probably identify a few of the other species. Namely – little brown, dead and largish beige flowery looking<br /><br />"I am also wondering if ‘having fungi growing in the top paddock’ is a euphemism for anything?"Flabmeisterhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00934077052437339591noreply@blogger.com