- Hydnellum "peckii"
Hydnellum, maybe H. peckii, known commonly as Bleeding tooth fungus and in North America as "strawberries and cream". The orange to red drops are guttation, a liquid oozed out by some fungi, probably for defense, think chemical warfare and also to catch the eye of photographers! - Hydnellum teeth
- Karma showing off her Amanita hemibapha she found near Kunzangdra
- Mushroamers with members of the National Mushroom Center of Bhutan in Ura
- Mushroom collection
- Mushroom collection
- Pseudocolus sp. stinkhorn seen near a small willow in the spruce forest above Ura
- Spathulariopsis velutipes
- Thalictrum chelidonii seen in KunzangDra
- Amanita greenish annulus
- Amanita sp. with greenish annulus
- Amanita sp showing its greenish annulus
- Austroboletus olivaceoglutinosus with green viscid cap found on Dochung La
- Two young Boletus reticuloceps seen near Ura
Local people do not appreciate these porcini and ignore them. Well, they think they are toxic. - Boletus reticuloceps found in Ura
Boletus reticuloceps, an excellent king bolete associate with conifers distributed in the Eastern Himalayas and Eastern Tibet. It was first described from the Tibetan areas in Yunnan. Then it was named as Aureboletus reticuloceps, but in 2005 in Sydowia 57-1 Wang, Q. B. & Y. J. Yao published "Boletus reticuloceps, a new combination for Aureoboletus reticuloceps" - Chanterelle selling lady in Lobesa
- Cyanosis vaga a common weed. This spiderwort related to tradescentia
Cyanosis vaga is a common tiny weed growing on the edges of fields & forest in the Himalayas - Boletus reticuloceps, a choice edible porcini growing with spruce in Ura, Bumthang, Bhutan
- Kunzang Dra Nye hermitage in Tang Valley (3250m / 10,680ft)
Padmasambhava and his student Namkhe Nyinpo mediated here in the 7th Century, but the present site was founded in 1488 by Pema Lingpa - House painters at work in Ura