Waterfalls and fungi
I love how Suzanne Simard describes, in exquisite detail, the fungi she studies: "The bell-shaped elf caps of the Mycena were dark brown at the apex and faded into translucent yellow at the margins, revealing gills underneath and a fragile stem. The stipes—stems—were rooted in the furrows of the bark, helping the log decay…. These fungi had evolved a way to break down wood by exuding acids and enzymes and using their cells to absorb the wood’s energy and nutrients."
She encourages us to LOOK in ways I have not looked before; to find the mycelium (until now, only a theory I read about). Whole worlds can grow in an inch or two of forest.
I'm also learning the difference between snow-melt and glacier-melt. This time of year, the waterfalls are gushing madly, fiercely, wildly. The clear water is snow-melt. The aqua-gray water is glacier melt.
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