I too have "seaweed" but it's on a very compacted stony bit of path. It always reappears when it rains heavily. I also have acres of liverwort so they obviuosly like hte same conditions.
Hi everyone, regarding the Jude's Ear, fungus growing in between flagstones.
Dovefromabove, you asked me if there was some wood nearby, well I checked the area and the only wood within three feet of the fungi is my shed so it's not that.
However, I was discussing the fungi with my hubby and he said he was sawing a lot of wood in that area some months back and the sawdust will have settled in the cracks of the paving slabs so maybe the fungi grew on this ???
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It indicates poor drainage - I'd give the area a bit of a going over with the hoe several times over the winter to stop it getting established.
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.
I too have "seaweed" but it's on a very compacted stony bit of path. It always reappears when it rains heavily. I also have acres of liverwort so they obviuosly like hte same conditions.
Will do, thanks again Dove.
Hi everyone, regarding the Jude's Ear, fungus growing in between flagstones.
Dovefromabove, you asked me if there was some wood nearby, well I checked the area and the only wood within three feet of the fungi is my shed so it's not that.
However, I was discussing the fungi with my hubby and he said he was sawing a lot of wood in that area some months back and the sawdust will have settled in the cracks of the paving slabs so maybe the fungi grew on this ???
Can anyone say if this is likely??
Yes, you can grow fungi on sawdust/woodchip/barkchips etc. so it's very likely what's happened.
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.
Thanks Dovefromabove, that solves it then????