Gardening Magazine

Wonderful Mushrooms

By Patientgardener @patientgardener

Wonderful Mushrooms

Look what I found lurking down the end of the garden.  Well it’s up the end of the garden really as my garden slopes up from the house.

I have had mushrooms in the garden before, in fact every year at this time there are mushrooms in the front lawn and I think they originate from the roots of the old conifer which weren’t taken out with the tree and are rotting under the lawn.  Whenever I dig in the front garden borders I come across bit of root with white stuff on it which I am assuming is the mycelium from which the mushrooms derive.

Wonderful Mushrooms

These mushrooms are growing under a rhododendron and bamboo in the Woodland Border in the back garden.  This is just below my compost bins and I have to admit that when I empty the bins any woody stuff that hasn’t rotted down gets thrown around the roots of the bamboo and other plants as a thick mulch.  I suspect the same thing is happening as in the front garden and there are various mycelium lurking amongst this woody mess and the result is these rather wonderful mushrooms.

Wonderful Mushrooms

I did contort myself under the rhododendron to take a photograph of this mushroom’s gills which looked great at the time but it is actually very out of focus and I don’t think my chiropractor would be very pleased to know I had been doing this after all her hard work yesterday.  We won’t mention the plant moving either!

I love gardening which is a form of controlling nature but I also get a real thrill when I come across something like these mushrooms unexpectedly.  I don’t think I am going to risk finding out if they are edible or not.  I wouldn’t know where to start with the identification and the way things have been going round here lately, I would probably get it wrong!  So I will just admire them hiding in the shrubs.


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