Thread: Fungi
View Single Post
  #5   Report Post  
Old 23-07-2009, 10:46 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
K K is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 1,966
Default Fungi

Phoebe B writes

"K" wrote in message
...
Phoebe B writes
Can anyone help please. A neighbour has a fungi problem.

This weird fungus was growing on our Ash Tree that was dying. It was
very rubbery and hard, and no-one seemed to know what it was. We were
advised to cut the Ash Tree down, which we did but the Tree Surgeon
couldn't take the stump out as it was too big. We have since built a
large concrete base over it and put up a summer house. Believe it or
not, that same weird fungus has appeared on / in / through our carpet
in the summer house !! What can we do about it ?
The fungus that looks the closest is Inonotus Dryadeus. However, the
picture shows it weeping. The fungus coming up through our summer
house floor (that was around the base of the tree and progressing up
the trunk in places) is smooth and if you push it it is very
resilient (I.e. you cannot scrape or break it off, as it just goes a
little brown and bends a bit). How on earth could it have gone
through a layer of concrete, the wooden floor of the summer house and
and carpet ?

The fungus that you see is just the fruiting body. The main 'plant'
is the mycelium - a mass of fine hairs. So it is possible for the fine
hairs to creep all over the place, and then throw up a fruiting body
when conditions are right. Alternatively, it could be a completely new
carried by spores. Fungus spores are very light, and it's a fair bet
to say that the spores of the commoner fungi are everywhere, and will
take root whenever conditions are right (which is how they got into
the dying ash tree in the first place).
-- Kay


Do you have any idea how they can kill it off please?


There's something called Armillatox which is used against honey fungus
in the garden, or they could try one of the DIY dry rot treatments.

I've never had need to kill any fungi, so can't comment on relative
efficacy.

--
Kay