Tuesday 12 June 2012

Good Morning Fungi after a Blood Moon


After trekking into the darkness to find a Blood Moon* we returned in the daylight finding wonders at our feet, well fungus at the very least.  These mushrooms caused quite some hilarity.  Well my affecting strange non-yoga like postures in order to get close up to my subjects did.  My 550D was quite new and in a spirit of scientific endeavour I enjoyed testing the strength left in me and the abilities of the camera and lens to capture these funguses on film.  These small flora spring up in the thousands almost from nowhere and seemingly return back to nowhere.  These shots are shared with the idea that some transient moments in life are not necessary to be, or maybe even worthy of being recorded but when they are documented then these records offer several windows into spaces we rarely choose to look.  For me these pictures bring back memories of a good morning and they also promise that there are more such mornings to come when the seemingly trivial might be alternatively noteworthy.

No funguses were harmed during the taking and making of these pictures.  None of the funguses featured here were picked, or eaten.  One photographer was harmed due his assuming improbable positions in order not to damage fungal growths.  A recovery cup of tea almost healed all ails for the damaged photographer.


*Blood Moon, or Bloodmoon is sometimes called a Hunter's Moon and is the first full moon after the Harvest Moon.  Occasionally the close orbit of the Moon brings a greater prominence and luminance to the Moon.  This was the case for the Blood Moon we had been seeking in a remote location beyond the glare of light pollution from modern cities.  Since the Moon's sidereal period differs from its synodic period, the perigee of the Moon (the point where it is closest to the Earth) does not stay in sync with the phases of the Moon.  Thus the Blood Moon does not correspond to any special timing of the Moon's distance from the Earth. This is why the Blood Moon is not, in general, brighter than any other regular full moon.


Good Morning Fungi after a Blood Moon (117)


Good Morning Fungi after a Blood Moon (111)


Good Morning Fungi after a Blood Moon (103)

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