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Tricyrtis, possibly Tricyrtis maculata, a toad lily seen near Trongsa.

Tricyrtis Trongsa DW Ms.jpg Trio women carrying heavy load of freshly harvested cassava roots from the fields to the villageDW MsThumbnailsTrichaptum perrottetii with 10 cm scale. Yes, Hexagonia comes to mind, but the hymenium is so unusually thin and the pores lacking the typical  hexagonal shape.Trio women carrying heavy load of freshly harvested cassava roots from the fields to the villageDW MsThumbnailsTrichaptum perrottetii with 10 cm scale. Yes, Hexagonia comes to mind, but the hymenium is so unusually thin and the pores lacking the typical  hexagonal shape.Trio women carrying heavy load of freshly harvested cassava roots from the fields to the villageDW MsThumbnailsTrichaptum perrottetii with 10 cm scale. Yes, Hexagonia comes to mind, but the hymenium is so unusually thin and the pores lacking the typical  hexagonal shape.Trio women carrying heavy load of freshly harvested cassava roots from the fields to the villageDW MsThumbnailsTrichaptum perrottetii with 10 cm scale. Yes, Hexagonia comes to mind, but the hymenium is so unusually thin and the pores lacking the typical  hexagonal shape.Trio women carrying heavy load of freshly harvested cassava roots from the fields to the villageDW MsThumbnailsTrichaptum perrottetii with 10 cm scale. Yes, Hexagonia comes to mind, but the hymenium is so unusually thin and the pores lacking the typical  hexagonal shape.