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Identification please?
It helps a lot, the books give a lot of pointers like size, shape, colour, smell, habitat, gills, spores etc…the more information the better the identification.I have no idea what tree it’s on but I think it’s about time I learned lol
Tree ID is an absolutely fundermental Bushcraft skill. Once you've mastered that you are on the road to a whole load of other things. Which wood is good, or bad, for which uses, which wood burns fast, slow, spits, gives out a lot of heat etc. Which nuts, berries, seeds, flowers and leaves are edible. Which fungi grow on which tree. Luckily there are only about 30 common native tree species in this country, so that's not too much to get your head around. Compare that to plants, with hundreds of species or fungi, with thousands of species. So yes, I agree with you, learning how to ID trees is something you should definitely try to learn, just two or three to begin with, and then keep expanding on this once you are comfortable.I have no idea what tree it’s on but I think it’s about time I learned lol
I'm a carpenter and joiner, but the number of trees I can confidently name in their woodland setting I can count on 1 hand, same with birds...Tree ID is an absolutely fundermental Bushcraft skill. Once you've mastered that you are on the road to a whole load of other things. Which wood is good, or bad, for which uses, which wood burns fast, slow, spits, gives out a lot of heat etc. Which nuts, berries, seeds, flowers and leaves are edible. Which fungi grow on which tree. Luckily there are only about 30 common native tree species in this country, so that's not too much to get your head around. Compare that to plants, with hundreds of species or fungi, with thousands of species. So yes, I agree with you, learning how to ID trees is something you should definitely try to learn, just two or three to begin with, and then keep expanding on this once you are comfortable.