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Trip to Great Gable with loaner D3300   -   Page   1
A few snaps along the way  Rate Topic 
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Posted: Fri Jun 3rd, 2016 11:05
 
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Robert



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Yesterday I went on a trip to Great Gable, one of the tallest of the peaks in the English Lakes.

I took Christopher, my youngest lad, a loaner Nikon D3300 and the Nikkor 18-105 VR, which seems to be proving one of my best, most versatile lenses.

We arrived just after midnight, parked and slept well, I had hoped to have been fairly well up by dawn but at 4 am I just couldn't raise the enthusiasm to clamber up the mountains. That came a little later...

All images taken with Nikon D3300 set to fully automatic, recording JPEG images, using a Nikkor 18-105 VR, hand held, no tripod for once!

This was the scene at 8am the Sun well up and a layer of mist covering the distant Helvellyn range.



Can anyone ID these two species please?

A small fungus, the cap is about 20mm in diameter, growing in a remote waterlogged bog surrounded by what I think is sphagnum moss.



The second species is a lovely, delicate, little white flower, growing near to the fungus above. It's almost like an orchid except I don't think orchids live in water?

[/url]

100% crop:



Unfortunately I forgot to set the image recording to NEF so I couldn't recover as much as I might have.

Will add more images over the weekend, a bit tired right now. My iPhone reckons I climbed 165 flights of stairs and covered over 9 miles walking yesterday.



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Posted: Sat Jun 4th, 2016 09:41
 
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Eric



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Bog Bean...Menyanthes trifoliata



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Posted: Sat Jun 4th, 2016 09:51
 
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Eric



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I think the fungus is a 'bonnet fungus' although they vary in colour. They grow in damp mossy places.

Just to show my lawn is more moss than grass.....


Edit..a
Though now I look at it closely, yours has a 'rifled' stalk. Hmmm

Attachment: image.jpeg (Downloaded 30 times)



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Posted: Sat Jun 4th, 2016 11:08
 
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Eric



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Take a look at Galerina Heterocystis.



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Posted: Sun Jun 5th, 2016 05:41
 
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Robert



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Thank you Eric, I thought you might know.

The Bog Bean... Menyanthes trifoliata it quite spectacular in a tiny sort of way, the tiny whiskers from the petals are fascinating and add a lot of character. As usual white flowers are quite a challenge, I should have shaded it. It would be interesting to make some UV images of it.

It seems the fungus, Galerina Heterocystis is a toxic species.

There is quite a large bed of the Bog Bean but only two Galerina Heterocystis. They are on a rather remote part of the fells, North of Green Gable.



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Posted: Sun Jun 5th, 2016 05:45
 
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Robert



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No sooner said than done! With the help of Google...

http://www.ultravioletphotography.com/content/index.php/topic/32-menyanthes-trifoliata-bogbean/



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Posted: Sun Jun 5th, 2016 16:01
 
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Eric



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Robert wrote:
Thank you Eric, I thought you might know.

The Bog Bean... Menyanthes trifoliata it quite spectacular in a tiny sort of way, the tiny whiskers from the petals are fascinating and add a lot of character. As usual white flowers are quite a challenge, I should have shaded it. It would be interesting to make some UV images of it.

It seems the fungus, Galerina Heterocystis is a toxic species.

There is quite a large bed of the Bog Bean but only two Galerina Heterocystis. They are on a rather remote part of the fells, North of Green Gable.


Thank Jan for the Bog Bean.;-)



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Posted: Sun Jun 5th, 2016 17:40
 
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Robert



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Eric wrote:
Thank Jan for the Bog Bean.;-)

Thanks Jan! :bowing:



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Posted: Sat Jun 11th, 2016 06:00
 
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Robert



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Have been really busy this week but now it's raining... I have been looking at the images again.

During our final assent to the top of Great Gable, we were treated to a stunning spectacle of a fast jet at close quarters. I MISSED this stunning pic of a Tornado GR4, Christopher yelled to me "JET!" but I didn't have time even to grab the camera, a split second later it was in front of us. At eye level, very close and very loud moving very quickly. Initially flying normally, suddenly as is came into the gap between the mountains of Kirk Fell and Great Gable, it flipped on edge, then banked a little more before it dived into the next valley. I was told by a friend who knows about these things that it was probably doing 350 to 400 knots.

Another shot of a lifetime missed!!! However... I have cobbled together an impression of what it looked like. The image of the Tornado IS NOT MINE, I plucked it from the internet, just to give you an idea of what we saw, the angles aren't quite right but it's pretty near what we saw.

The valley is Ennerdale.

Attachment: Screen Shot 2016-06-11 at 11.38.52.jpg (Downloaded 16 times)



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Posted: Sat Jun 11th, 2016 14:47
 
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jk



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Good work Robert.
It looks very real.

Pays to have camera in hand!



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