There's this fascinating gauze like layer over some areas of my garden.
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There's this fascinating gauze like layer over some areas of my garden.
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There's this fascinating gauze like layer over some areas of my garden.
@dillyd Cool! Do you think it’s mycelia?
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There's this fascinating gauze like layer over some areas of my garden.
@dillyd They look like spider webs, but I don’t think spiders build webs on the ground generally?!
Fascinating, though.
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There's this fascinating gauze like layer over some areas of my garden.
@dillyd Was it there when the snow melted, or did it happen after?
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@dillyd Was it there when the snow melted, or did it happen after?
@dillyd Oh, read alt text and it sounds like it was there.
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@dillyd Oh, read alt text and it sounds like it was there.
@sunumbral I'm not sure. Today was the first day I could venture to that point without sinking into snow and mud
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@dillyd Cool! Do you think it’s mycelia?
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There's this fascinating gauze like layer over some areas of my garden.
@dillyd I get that here in the Pacific Northwest, US as well. I always assumed it was something like a silkworm or a creature of that kind, but I'm not sure!
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@carolannie @SunnJax
I never heard of it but that looks about right. But wow, the Wikipedia article talks about it as a disease and a pathogen, not as an organism in and of itself, I guess just because it damages people's precious lawns 😂
Speaking of which, while we were all outdoors enjoying the weather, some salespeople were going door to door selling lawn treatment services. We laughed them out of there. -
@dillyd They look like spider webs, but I don’t think spiders build webs on the ground generally?!
Fascinating, though.
@lydiaschoch
I'm guessing snow mold as @carolannie suggested.
We get cobwebs spiders here but their webs are much more dense. This was super light. -
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