If they grow there once........they could also be an ongoing supplyIf they grow there regularly it's an ongoing supply
Didn't think time was an issue
If they grow there once........they could also be an ongoing supplyIf they grow there regularly it's an ongoing supply
Didn't think time was an issue
They are dotted about at random.
I'm pretty sure magic ones only grow in a circle?
I also found one of these in the front lawn, just a single lone red mushroom. I thought it was a strawberry, until I plucked it up.
View attachment 249732
Why is it that some types grow in a circle?
Compare with Amanita jacksonii
(Not that I'm even sure it's a UK species, but if it is, it looks similar, not that anyone could be sure from one shot...)
Edit - in fact your photo is actually from the amanita Wikipedia page!
Yes, a google job, the original was a bit mangled. It seems odd that there is just one lone, solitary orphan on the whole lawn.
Here’s my ring. About a metre across.
...
Oddly enough, I mowed the front lawn this evening, found a great big mushroom ring, about a metre across.
Can we just have clarification where this ring was growing???
Generally accepted definition of lawn.
Huh? My front lawn, as in the grass that covers the soil in the front garden of my house. What did I miss?
Don’t people ‘mow the lawn’ any more, with their lawn mower?
Ahh, I see, you were mocking my carefully cultivated collection weeds and other flora hidden in the guise of grass."An area of short, regularly mown grass in the garden of a house or park."
'Twas meant as a gentle prod at the absence of green stuff generally known as grass. But the joke, such as it was, fell as flat as a flat thing, a dead flat thing. A dead flat thing that wasn't just resting but had turned up its toe:
Ahh, I see, you were mocking my carefully cultivated collection weeds and other flora hidden in the guise of grass.
A goat?On a similar vein, is there something I can throw at the 'lawn' to kill off and destroy all the other invading greenery? Something obviously not harmful to animals etc.
Be careful. I tried and everything went brown except the stuff I was hoping to removeOn a similar vein, is there something I can throw at the 'lawn' to kill off and destroy all the other invading greenery? Something obviously not harmful to animals etc.
A goat?
Ha ha brilliantI think that's what lived on it before we moved in six months ago.
Serious lack of maintenance of any sort done outside.
View attachment 249922