#Earlier posts: Part 1: Friday 30 Jan - Settle to Carlisle; and first day
See Part 2: Saturday: AGM & Conference (to be written)
Part 3: Field Trip and journey home. (This post)
| 10am Carlisle Cremetorium boundary with Carlisle Cemetery - Fay introduces the morning's instructions in respectful tone.. |
| Kiar meanwhile glaces at lichens on the adjacent seat |
Then we are off to the cemetery proper with graves stones.
What better place to start than one with Psilolechia lucida - well know for liking acid stones and can grow in underhangs
On the side they are looking at is Physconia - grisea or enteroxanthaEnteroxantha. Janet ? John suggests enteroxamtha. It is supposed to have bottle-brush rhizines underneath at the centre of the thallus, though can have simple ones at the edge. Janet cuts of the edge of the thallus to reveal rhizines below. Still don't look very bottle brushy to me -
| Closer up of Physconia |
| Lecidia lithophila |
John lies down n the tarmac to record common things like Physcia caseia and Lecanora muralis then points to this white lichen - Porpidia crustulata - separated in Dobson from Porpidai macroacrap by size of apothecia - less than 103 mm comes to P crustulata - but he takes a sample home to check.
| Back for lunch at 12. |
After lunch I search the group of people I had been with initially, but they have gone. I use the map provided at the Crematorium and set off walking north.. and come to the Dissenters Chapel, The roof facing north had big colonies of Rhizocarpon geographicum and there is Porpidia tuberculosa on the butresses below.
In the bricks and cement on the right I see lots of apothecia
| I think this is Lecanora albescens - but I really wish I had tested ti with C to make sure it is not L antiqua. Too late now. |
No Rhizocarpon geographicum on the south facing side
| View west from this chapel |
To the north of this chapel is a low tombstone with a sloping roof, with two interesting lichens - see tomb in foreground:-
On the west facing side there is abundant Cladonia polydactyla.
This is a Cladonia with red apothecia,
See the patches above, between the moss and the grey foliose lichen
Still thinking..
Fay gives me a lift back to the station. Here I meet Joseph Halda, also waiting for a train. He buys me a coffee and we sat on the station picnic tables.
I catch the 3:20 train. I enjoy views on the way home. Down there is the meandering river Eden.. The base for the coming BLS spring meeting this 11-18 April. Above is the Pennine ridge - Dufton Pike - and other Hills above High Cup Nick .. Somewhere just beyond there is the site of Moor House a YNU trip to be held there in 1-2 Aug There are patches of snow on the tops. The train travels higher and we near the summit where the rive Swale captures catchment from the River Ure. Weird to see "Dent", "Sheffield" and "Nottingham" - on the train announcement panel. But we pass Garsdale, Dent, Horton in Ribblesdale.. and I get off at Settle.
......just after 5 and get to my car - safely there - but now adorned with 15 huge bird droppings!!. I look up:- Not just tree branches above but also telephone / electric wires. I look down:- the dark tarmac.. not sure if I could see droppings .. but maybe one or two lichens - like those on the crematorium path earlier in the day. I will come back in the daylight on a warm day and check them!!.
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