I was wandering through the woods the other day, just following a narrow trail where sunlight barely broke through the dense canopy. That’s when I stumbled across something that completely stopped me in my tracks. At first, I had no idea what I was even looking at.
It was bright blue. Vivid, almost unnatural. Smooth, shiny, and round like some tiny piece of modern art someone had dropped in the forest. My first thought? “Is this… plastic?” But the shape was strange. There was this tiny, almost tail-like protrusion curling out of it. It looked… soft. F.l ℮shy, even, which made it even weirder. Nothing in this forest looked like this.
Out of sheer curiosity (and maybe a little mischief), I poked it. The surface gave way under my finger, surprisingly light and squishy, almost like styrofoam. Then it cracked, just a little — and I swear, the blue inside was even more intense than the outside. I had to pause and take a step back. Whatever this was, it didn’t feel like anything natural I’d ever seen.
After a bit of Googling — because I’m that person — it finally clicked: I had found a young fungus, a stinkhorn mushroom in its “egg” stage 🍄.
Turns out, stinkhorns are some of the forest’s strangest residents. They start life underground as these oddly shaped “eggs,” completely round and smooth, tucked into the soil like tiny alien pods. When they’re ready, they split open, and a long, bizarre structure bursts out — the thing I mistook for a tail. The inside has this soft, foam-like texture, which explains the squishy, styrofoam feeling I’d noticed.
It’s wild to think about how nature works. Something that looks so artificial, so unreal, is actually just part of a mushroom’s life cycle. The woods are full of surprises like this, hiding in plain sight, waiting for someone curious enough to notice.
So yeah… it wasn’t plastic. It wasn’t an alien artifact. Just a weird, beautiful stage of a fungus doing its thing in the wild. Nature, honestly, sometimes feels more imaginative than any human could ever design.





