🍄Ipsissimus🍁Mocata🍄
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mocata.bsky.social
🍄Ipsissimus🍁Mocata🍄
@mocata.bsky.social
250 followers 25 following 770 posts
A doomed forest hermit with too many cats. Original photos of NorCal natural history with an emphasis on mycology & native botany, but occasionally posting stuff about heavy music and weirdo cinema. ☭ https://linktr.ee/mocata
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“For every like, I’ll post one song I love” has been making the rounds, but I’m going to put a different spin on it that both alleviates my indecision and possibly/hopefully produces more interesting results. (Yes, I’m old and prefer my hard drive filled with decades of accumulated music to Spotify)
Thank you! I can’t wait for the Pacific tree frogs to start seeking shelter under my loose bark.
As of yesterday, I have officially reached the “Breaking Down” stage of the Snag Cycle. Yay for 40, I guess?
I always called them Otter Pops regardless of if they’re off-brand. The secret is that the knock-off “Helados Fun Pops” version is WAY better than the real name brand. Superior flavors, and they melt into a more satisfying slushy texture compared to real Otter Pops, which melt more like a popsicle.
Pollinator time out in the garden. I know it’s a rare thing for me to be posting something cultivated, but with a bloom like that, I couldn’t resist.

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Same here! I always love monotypic stuff, especially when it’s family level or above. Whenever I see one, it’s like “Hell yeah — you keep doing your own thing, ya little weirdo!”.
It’s the only member of Paeoniaceae in my area, so the first time I saw one, the weird morphology really threw me for a loop! According to this paper, it’s primarily pollinated by wasps, Syrphid flies, and sweat bees, although I did see a fat bumblebee rather awkwardly clinging upsidedown to one.
View of Pollination ecology and floral function of Brown’s peony (Paeonia brownii) in the Blue Mountains of northeastern Oregon
pollinationecology.org
Paeonia brownii. These native peonies have such striking flowers, yet they can be easy to miss while walking down a trail, as the flowers face downward, showing only hints of burgundy petals from the side. If you you flip them over like this, however, they are quite a sight to behold!

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A fungal flashback from earlier in the year: Verpa conica, a not-quite-a-morel in Morchellaceae.

Quit giggling at the back of the class — it looks like a daikon radish wearing a cloche and *certainly* not like anything else.

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Aphyllon franciscanum.
I’ve been wanting to see these golden weirdos for a while now and I lucked out and found multiple clusters in the same ultramafic hillside where I saw the Brodiaea sierrae, as they’ve also adapted to handle the harsh, nutrient-poor conditions of serpentine soil.

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Been enjoying the debut release by The New Eves quite a bit. A blend of post-punk and English folk revival that reminds me at times of ‘Furia’ by The Fates, the short-lived group started by Una Baines of The Fall.

Bonus points for the descending “Holiday in Cambodia”-inspired riff on this track:
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The New Eves - Highway Man
YouTube video by TheNewEvesVEVO
m.youtube.com
(This and the next few posts are presented with apologies to those who follow me elsewhere for being repeats, as I’m slowly trying to catch this place back up since my absence here!)
Rhododendron occidentale. A ubiquitous shrub of Pacific forests, it may not have the giant blooms of its cultivated cousins, but it more than makes up for it by having one of the most divine scents you’ll ever encounter in the woods. You’ll smell it before you even see it yards down the trail!

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Happy International Cat Day from this ridiculous beast.
Sleazy as hell, but aesthetically my sort of sleaze. Definitely passes my “EW Test” (whether or not a horror/exploitation film looks like something that the members of Electric Wizard would have playing muted on a TV somewhere in room while rehearsing).
Someone found a sunbeam.

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Okay, last pic of Brodiaea sierrae, I swear! This time, however, it’s my attempt to immortalize it through my rusty and questionable ink & watercolor skills. Remind me next time to not to wait until the last day to try to make something like this for a gift, especially when I’m so out of practice.
Jokes on you: any time you deem my puns to be that terrible, owl just take it as a compliment.
Jesus Christ, is the Village Diner holding his family hostage or something? Hooo did this to him?
I’m not sure what I love more—the terrified-looking owl waiter or the parking lot palimpsest.
Never seen one on a Plantago before, how cool! My childhood home would get big patches of “not quite dandelions” (I’m guessing now that they were Leontodons?) and it would be rare to find any that *didn’t* have a stem gall!

Unfortunately no ID for your Plantago, but this is still a neat resource:
Gallformers
The place to ID and learn about galls on plants in the US and Canada.
www.gallformers.org
Brodiaea sierrae again, but with a little something extra—a mystery gall on its stem. From what I’ve read, this is formed by an undescribed species (!) of midge in the genus Lasioptera that seems to have a preference for Brodiaeoideae.

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I’ll bet if you read the fine print that it’s somehow connected to the business that was doing the Lorena Bobbit psychic readings from the other ad.
“One suction” has the unsettling implication that it somehow accomplishes the deed in one fell swoop, which honestly sounds kind of terrifying. I feel like there are active dismemberment lawsuits for this device.
What a fluffy little angel! Looks like something in the tiger moth family; likely the sort that are equally cute ”wooly bear"-type caterpillars when younger.