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A homestead on 55 acres of rolling hills in the Piedmont region of South Carolina in the foothills of the Blue Ridge mountains. Our vision is to create a wildlife habitat with native plants, grow food in harmony with nature, be good stewards of the land and create our best outdoor garden life.
Awesome pics! Especially love the second to last one.
ReplyDeleteKarin these are spectacular captures...I also love the second to the last one...
ReplyDeleteThey are so other-worldly! Beautiful!
ReplyDeleteLooks like a golf ball. Cow pasture pool.
ReplyDeleteI loved these very strange-formed fungus.
ReplyDeleteI don't know why but when I see these mushrooms, my heart seems to beat a little faster. I guess I just love mushrooms and your pictures are gorgeous. I like the first one most.
ReplyDeleteHaha, very cute! The strange world of fungi is really quite amazing!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful mushrooms. We have some of the second-to-last ones that look like prickly golf balls. I like the mystery of mushrooms - here one day, gone the next. Some edible, most will kill you. Mushrooms make me think of different overlapping natural worlds and how little we understand ...
ReplyDeleteThe photos seems so surreal even though they're a reflection of nature. The next to the last one reminds me of work of the photographer, Karl Blossfeldt. I'm partial to the third photo.
ReplyDeleteahh, one of my favourite times of the year with all the wonderful mushrooms and fungi springing up.
ReplyDeleteThese are amazing photos! And they do look alien. I love how they look after a rain.
ReplyDeleteWe've had so much rain I've had some pretty weird mushrooms/fungi, including one that was bright orange and tubular. Cool pix!!
ReplyDeleteYour stunning photos give one a whole new perspective on fungi! I also very much enjoyed your bad hair day post. I have been gone awhile and am still trying to catch up. I'm glad I didn't miss these two posts!
ReplyDeleteFungus, mushrooms and edible landed flying saucer?
ReplyDelete