HI,
Long ago, I had a friend in high school whose brother was a ranger for the National Parks. His speciality was trees. My friend would comment how his brother would drive with one eye on the road and one surveying trees. If something was particularly interesting, he'd stop short to jump out and look. I remember thinking the brother pretty odd and how scary it must be a passenger. That is until I took up mushrooming years ago and found I pretty much did the same.
I consider myself a pretty good driver and quite observant. Today while driving no more than 25 miles per hour, I spotted some orange curly things around a tree. I drove past, thought it about it again, then stopped to back up for a second look:

I looked a little more carefully, grabbed my camera while telling my friend Helen, "I think we have a patch of stinkhorns."

While other cars slowly passed us wondering what could be so interesting on the parkway, we took pictures liked we just witnessed a great event:


These are interesting mushrooms whose fruiting body looks like an egg, then opens to extend a rather phallic fungi with a tip wet with spores. Often they have a strong odor, which attracts flies who descend upon them and help distribute their spores.

On top is the egg form, see the roots sticking out, and the bottom image is fully extended, though note the remainders of the egg at the bottom. I didn't have a knife to make a nice neat cross section of the egg to see the stalk wrapped up inside. Perhaps I will return tomorrow to get this final image.
When President Nixon visited China in the early 1970's, a variety of stinkhorn (family
Phallaceae) was served to him as an honored guest.
Regards,