The Language of Conks: What Shelf Fungi Teach Us About Caring for Trees and Forests

In the hush of an old woodland, where trembling aspens flicker like coins of light and spruce roots braid themselves through centuries of memory, there is another kingdom quietly at work beneath the bark. It is neither plant nor animal, but something older in spirit and stranger in form — the fungal realm. To kneel beside a weathered trunk and notice a shelf fungus protruding from its side is to glimpse the forest speaking in another language.

These woody shelves, called polypores, are the fruiting bodies of immense underground and internal fungal networks. The name “polypore” refers to the tiny pores beneath the cap, replacing the delicate gills of other mushrooms. When these fungi harden into woody, hoof-shaped structures, arborists and foragers alike call them conks. They are the visible punctuation marks of a hidden process: decomposition, renewal, and the recycling of life itself.

The forest does not waste.

A conk may seem lifeless at first glance — gray as stone, ridged with age, fixed immovably to the trunk. Yet within it are millions of spores waiting for the right wind, the right wound, the right moment. Like rings in a tree, many shelf fungi add a fresh layer of spore-producing tissue each growing season. Some years produce two flushes of growth, making time itself difficult to measure precisely. One conk with eight visible layers may be four years old, or perhaps eight. Fungi, like forests, resist human impatience.

Among the most recognizable is Fomes fomentarius, the tinder conk, hard and gray, shaped uncannily like the hoof of a horse. Nearby may grow Ganoderma applanatum, known as artist’s conk because its creamy white underside bruises dark when touched, preserving every line like charcoal on parchment. A child can sketch a bird upon it with a fingertip, and the forest will keep the drawing for years.

These organisms are not invaders in the simple sense. They are recyclers, chemists, undertakers, and midwives of succession. Roughly 1,700 species of wood-rotting polypores have been documented in North America alone, each evolved to unlock the dense architecture of wood. Trees build themselves from sunlight, water, minerals, and carbon dioxide. Fungi dismantle those structures molecule by molecule, returning nutrients to soil and life to the ecosystem.

Without fungi, forests would choke upon their own dead.

Yet their appearance on a living tree often tells a more sobering story. Shelf fungi are usually dead-wood dependent organisms, thriving on weakened, wounded, scarred or dying tissue. Most wood decay begins when airborne spores enter exposed wood through injury. A broken limb. A careless pruning cut. A scar from construction equipment. Fire, lightning, drought, sunscald, insects boring into bark — all become doorways.

The fungus does not create the weakness alone. Often, it merely answers an invitation.

A stressed tree becomes vulnerable. Heat waves, compacted soils, severed roots, and prolonged drought leave trees physiologically exhausted, less able to compartmentalize decay. The fungal mycelium moves silently through sapwood and heartwood, digesting lignin — the very compound that gives wood its strength. What appears externally as a single shelf may conceal columns of internal decay extending metres above and below the fruiting body.

Knock on such a trunk with your knuckles or a sounding hammer and the tree may answer with a hollow resonance, a wooden echo hinting at unseen rot within.

And still, the forest persists.

Woodpeckers arrive next. Sapsuckers drill neat rows into stressed bark to drink rising sap. Beetles tunnel through softened wood. Mosses gather moisture in fissures. Cavities become homes for owls, chickadees, squirrels, and raccoons. What humans call decay, ecosystems call opportunity.

A wildlife tree is not a failed tree. It is a standing community.

This understanding lies at the heart of wise forestry and compassionate arboriculture. Too often, those appreciating our urban forests treat trees as isolated ornaments rather than members of a living network. We prune aggressively, wound roots, compact soil, and sterilize deadwood from greenspaces as though death itself were untidy. Yet forests thrive through cycles of growth, injury, decomposition, and renewal.

The great mycologist-naturalists remind us to look deeper. Paul Stamets writes of fungi as Earth’s neurological network, threading intelligence through ecosystems. Merlin Sheldrake invites us to see forests not as collections of individuals but as entangled conversations. David Arora teaches us to approach mushrooms with curiosity, humility, and delight — to kneel in the leaf litter and truly observe.

And observation changes stewardship.

If we wish to care for our trees and forests, we must first stop imagining ourselves outside of them.

The Kenyan initiative Watu Wa Miti — “People of the Trees” — understood this profoundly. Founded in 1922 by Richard St. Barbe Baker alongside Chief Josiah Njonjo, the movement began with a deceptively simple pledge: plant ten trees every year, protect trees everywhere, and perform one good deed daily. It was not merely a forestry campaign. It was a moral philosophy rooted in reciprocity.

To care for forests is to care for future shade we may never sit beneath.

Modern arborists know there is no true cure once aggressive wood-decay fungi establish themselves deeply within a tree. Species such as Phellinus tremulae (Aspen Bracket) and Schizophyllum commune (Common Split Gill) colonize stressed wood and produce characteristic fruiting bodies that reveal internal decline already underway. By the time conks appear, the hidden mycelial network may have occupied large portions of the trunk or roots.

The task, then, is prevention and respect.

Protect roots from compaction. Avoid unnecessary wounds. Prune properly and sparingly. Water young trees deeply during drought. Preserve diverse forests rather than monocultures. Leave some deadwood in naturalized areas so fungal and insect communities can continue nutrient cycling. Understand that fungi are not enemies to eradicate, but indicators of ecological imbalance and participants in renewal.

And perhaps most importantly: do not destroy the evidence.

Removing a conk from a tree does not remove the fungus within. The visible mushroom is merely the reproductive structure, while the true organism — the mycelium — permeates the wood invisibly. Tearing off fruiting bodies may reduce spore dispersal, but it does not halt decay. In damp weather, such disturbance may even aid spore spread.

The forest is subtler than our attempts to control it.

To walk among trees is to walk among beings engaged in constant transformation. A fallen birch nourishes fungi. Fungi nourish soil. Soil nourishes seedlings. Seedlings become forests. Forests shape climate, hold water, soften wind, cool cities, and shelter life.

Every conk on a trunk is both warning and wisdom.

It tells us that trees are mortal. That wounds matter. That ecosystems recycle grief into fertility. And that caring for forests means more than planting trees — it means protecting relationships: between roots and rain, fungi and woodpeckers, insects and bark, people and the living earth.

If we listen closely enough, even a silent shelf fungus can teach us how to belong to the forest again.

Thank you to Scott Kindrachuk, Supervisor with Urban Forestry in the City of Saskatoon Parks Department. From June 9–11, arborists will be working in the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area to professionally remove selected standing dead trees identified as potential falling hazards, fire risks, or disease concerns. These trees will be marked with a spray-painted dot prior to the commencement of work.

Part SE 23-36-6 – Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area – 241 Township Road 362-A

Part SE 23-36-6 – SW Off-Leash Recreation Area (Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area ) – 355 Township Road 362-A

S ½ 22-36-6 Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area (West of SW OLRA) – 467 Township Road 362-A

NE 21-36-6 “George Genereux” Afforestation Area – 133 Range Road 3063

Wikimapia Map: type in Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area or

Google Maps South West Off Leash area location pin at parking lot

Web page: https://stbarbebaker.wordpress.com

Where is the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area? with map

Where is the George Genereux Urban Regional Park (Afforestation Area)?with map

Pinterest richardstbarbeb

Blogger: FriendsAfforestation

Tumblr friendsafforestation.tumblr.comFacebook Group Page: Users of the George Genereux Urban Regional Park

Facebook: StBarbeBaker Afforestation Area

Facebook for the non profit Charity Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. FriendsAreas

Facebook group page : Users of the St Barbe Baker Afforestation Area

Facebook: South West OLRA

Reddit: FriendsAfforestation

BlueSky Social

Mix: friendsareas

YouTube

Support via Zeffy

Please help protect / enhance your afforestation areas, please contact the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. (e-mail / e-transfers )

Donate your old vehicle, here’s how!  

Support using Canada Helps

Support via a recycling bottle donation and Join the plastic-recycle challenge!

United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration

““Be like a tree in pursuit of your cause. Stand firm, grip hard, thrust upward. Bend to the winds of heaven..” Richard St. Barbe Baker

A Close Call: Fire, Forests, and the Power of Vigilance

Last night, just as the sun dipped behind the horizon, the west side of Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area lit up — not from the golden hues of a prairie sunset, but from the angry, orange glow of a raging fire. In the heart of our springtime renewal, police and fire crews raced to the scene. Thanks to their quick action — and a police helicopter overhead guiding fire trucks through the quickest routes to the fire location just to the north of Cedar Villa Estates, and west of the wetlands — a disaster was narrowly averted.

Fires which start during the day — a careless spark, a smouldering cigarette butt, a moment of negligence and carelessness in these dry, windy spring conditions — but by nightfall, they can grow into roaring infernos. This was the case last evening just before midnight. The proximity of the fire to the SaskPower Right of Way posed an additional grave threat: high-voltage transmission lines carrying critical electricity from the Queen Elizabeth Power Station run through this area. If these lines had been compromised, the resulting power outages could have devastated nearby communities, affecting homes, hospitals, emergency services, and businesses across Saskatoon and beyond. Imagine an entire evening, even days, without power — no lights, no heating, no communications — all from a fire that might have started with a single careless action.

At this time, thankfully, no personal injuries were reported, no first responders were injured or lost their lives, no property was damaged. We owe an enormous debt of gratitude to our first responders for their swift, brave work. Yet this close call is a stark reminder: stewardship of our natural areas is not just about protecting plants and animals. It is about protecting the people, the communities, and the very lifelines that sustain us.

Spring, for all its beauty, carries hidden dangers. Dry grasses, leftover debris, and brisk seasonal winds turn greenspaces into tinderboxes. Cedar Villa Estates lies just a stone’s throw from the afforestation area, and nearby CNR rail tracks haul cargo essential to daily life as well as flammable materials. A single spark in these conditions can endanger homes, ecosystems, and livelihoods in a flash. It’s a stark reminder that fires can escalate beyond our control faster than we ever imagine – and there are no fire departments across the street from the forest- so we all must remain careful and vigilant.

In this dry spring with brisk prairie winds, we ask everyone who visits the afforestation areas to be vigilant stewards of the land. Protect the rich biodiversity, human users, the songbirds, the fox kits, the wildflowers, and the wetlands teeming with unseen life. Did you know, over 62 species at risk call this place home — from tiny pollinators to majestic hawks. If you see suspicious activity, report it. If you spot a fire, call 911 immediately.

And while you’re outside helping to protect nature, why not celebrate it, too? Take part in the City Nature Challenge — download the free iNaturalist app and snap photos of any living organism you spot. Together, we can nurture and safeguard the wild heart of Saskatoon.

Stay safe, stay watchful, and thank you for being part of the solution.

Addresses:

Part SE 23-36-6 – Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area – 241 Township Road 362-A

Part SE 23-36-6 – SW Off-Leash Recreation Area (Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area ) – 355 Township Road 362-A

S ½ 22-36-6 Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area (West of SW OLRA) – 467 Township Road 362-A

NE 21-36-6 “George Genereux” Afforestation Area – 133 Range Road 3063

Wikimapia Map: type in Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area

Google Maps South West Off Leash area location pin at parking lot

Web page: https://stbarbebaker.wordpress.com

Where is the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area? with map

Where is the George Genereux Urban Regional Park (Afforestation Area)?with map

Pinterest richardstbarbeb

Blogger: FriendsAfforestation

Tumblr friendsafforestation.tumblr.comFacebook Group Page: Users of the George Genereux Urban Regional Park

Facebook: StBarbeBaker Afforestation Area

Facebook for the non profit Charity Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. FriendsAreas

Facebook group page : Users of the St Barbe Baker Afforestation Area

Facebook: South West OLRA

Reddit: FriendsAfforestation

BlueSky Social

Mix: friendsareas

YouTube

Support via Zeffy

Please help protect / enhance your afforestation areas, please contact the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. (e-mail / e-transfers )

Donate your old vehicle, here’s how!  

Support using Canada Helps

Support via a recycling bottle donation and Join the plastic-recycle challenge!

United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration

““Be like a tree in pursuit of your cause. Stand firm, grip hard, thrust upward. Bend to the winds of heaven..”

Richard St. Barbe Baker

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