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aag.jpg Railings line almost the entire trail because of the sheer cliffs of the basalt monolith.ThumbnailsOrange fungus along the Big Creek Trail in the fall. This fungus is common in southwestern Washington State. I think it is a fungus called orange mushroom pimple (Hypomyces lactifluorum) that attacks other mushrooms and causes them to change to this orangRailings line almost the entire trail because of the sheer cliffs of the basalt monolith.ThumbnailsOrange fungus along the Big Creek Trail in the fall. This fungus is common in southwestern Washington State. I think it is a fungus called orange mushroom pimple (Hypomyces lactifluorum) that attacks other mushrooms and causes them to change to this orangRailings line almost the entire trail because of the sheer cliffs of the basalt monolith.ThumbnailsOrange fungus along the Big Creek Trail in the fall. This fungus is common in southwestern Washington State. I think it is a fungus called orange mushroom pimple (Hypomyces lactifluorum) that attacks other mushrooms and causes them to change to this orangRailings line almost the entire trail because of the sheer cliffs of the basalt monolith.ThumbnailsOrange fungus along the Big Creek Trail in the fall. This fungus is common in southwestern Washington State. I think it is a fungus called orange mushroom pimple (Hypomyces lactifluorum) that attacks other mushrooms and causes them to change to this orangRailings line almost the entire trail because of the sheer cliffs of the basalt monolith.ThumbnailsOrange fungus along the Big Creek Trail in the fall. This fungus is common in southwestern Washington State. I think it is a fungus called orange mushroom pimple (Hypomyces lactifluorum) that attacks other mushrooms and causes them to change to this orangRailings line almost the entire trail because of the sheer cliffs of the basalt monolith.ThumbnailsOrange fungus along the Big Creek Trail in the fall. This fungus is common in southwestern Washington State. I think it is a fungus called orange mushroom pimple (Hypomyces lactifluorum) that attacks other mushrooms and causes them to change to this orangRailings line almost the entire trail because of the sheer cliffs of the basalt monolith.ThumbnailsOrange fungus along the Big Creek Trail in the fall. This fungus is common in southwestern Washington State. I think it is a fungus called orange mushroom pimple (Hypomyces lactifluorum) that attacks other mushrooms and causes them to change to this orang

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Steve Jones
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