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- Newsgroups: rec.gardens
- Path: sparky!uunet!utcsri!torn!watserv2.uwaterloo.ca!csg.uwaterloo.ca!bobw
- From: bobw@csg.uwaterloo.ca (Bob Wildfong)
- Subject: Identify this strange toadstool
- Message-ID: <BxvDF2.H4v@watserv2.uwaterloo.ca>
- Sender: news@watserv2.uwaterloo.ca
- Organization: Computer Systems Group, University of Waterloo
- Distribution: na
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 16:49:50 GMT
- Lines: 34
-
- I wonder if any mycologists out there can identify the weird growths which
- have appeared on the lawns on my street. I've seen toadstools before, but
- these specimens are truly bizarre.
-
- They're generally white, but sometimes with a few brown specks near the bottom,
- height ranging from 3 feet to over 6 feet, with a roughly conical shape,
- sometimes reminiscent of two or three large spheres stacked one on top of the
- other.
-
- They seem to require cold weather to grow, since they always appear immediately
- after the first snowfall and they grow amazingly quickly, often within a few
- hours.
-
- I've seen the neighbourhood children playing with these monstrous toadstools,
- putting hats and scarves on them and decorating their surfaces with buttons,
- twigs and other scraps to make them look like towering, white, bloated people.
- I do hope, for the childrens' sake that they're not poisonous.
-
- Please, if anyone can help me identify this species, if would put my mind
- at rest. I'm particularly interested in their growth habits. Are they
- detrimental to the lawn? If not, I'd appreciate any hints on how to encourage
- them to grow in my yard, too. They have a kind of, I don't know, charm about
- them when they're dressed up like that.
-
- All replies appreciated,
-
-
- Bob Wildfong bobw@csg.uwaterloo.ca
- Waterloo, Ontario bobw@csg.waterloo.edu
- AgCan zone 5a, USDA zone 4 (on a windy hilltop)
-
- Where the first heavy snowfall has taken me by surprise, coming three weeks
- earlier than last year. Guess I'll finish my yardwork in the spring.
-
-