A cluster of morels in the road - not Photoshopped |
Click to enlarge |
In a followup email he corrected me, pointing out this was a double entendre, as Holy Moly is an expression of amazement with origins back to 1892 and popularized in comics by Billy Batson, the alter-ego of Captain Marvel. In this case however he was referring to the fact that we found them on Good Friday, a holy day. What a scholar!
Black Morel - Mark Bower |
"The yellow morels can be pretty dark, gray, etc. The “black morels” (Morchella angusticeps) around here are pretty uncommon. The best way to differentiate - the ridges of black morels are darker than the pits; with yellow morels the pits are darker than the ridges. Here is the only black morel I have ever seen: (photo taken with film camera!!)"
Slug on a fingertip |
Snails are part our food chain when we don't clean a mushroom thoroughly. "These critters have about 90 calories per 100 grams of "meat," which is high in protein (12 to 16 percent) and rich in minerals." (Outdoorlife)
Note:
Charley Burwick wrote implying that the mushrooms above might have been Photoshopped into the image. I resent the implication and assure you that those photographs were taken today with my wife as my witness, no matter what photographic crimes may have occurred at Bull Creek in the past by the Fishin Magicians.
More Morel Madness by the Fishin Magicians |
* "True morels split off from all other fungal species 129 million years ago, during the beginning of the Cretaceous Period. Back then, mammals were primitive little things, dinosaurs still ruled the world and morels were kind of an afterthought. This pretty much proves that dinosaurs had small brains or lacked culinary skills. Since then, morels have evolved into 177 related species.
Based on new genetic analysis, scientists now know that morels are very old, but not at all the oldest of 1.5 million species of fungi. They are found widely around the world, probably traveled with the continents as they drifted apart, but still look pretty much the same way they did millions of years ago." (sciencedaily.com)