Thalactrum, or meadow rue The aphid love these plants, but this year I've been hand watering and using the hose to get the aphids off each morning. The plant does fine with a strong enough spray to get rid of the aphid that cluster massively. Here's a 2015 post which shows aphid larvae on this plant.
If this is not a mutinus elegans, it's certainly one of its close relatives. It showed up in the front yard this morning.
"MushroomExpert.comMutinus elegans, M. caninus, & M. ravenelii[ Agaricomycetes > Phallales > Phallaceae > Mutinus . . . ]by Michael KuoStinkhorns frequently bewilder people by popping up in lawns, thrusting their slime-covered tips into the world within a matter of hours. They have been much maligned over the years, probably because--well, because they stink and they often look like penises (human, canine, or alien). Unlike other mushrooms, the stinkhorn distributes its spores by applying an odorous, spore-thick slime to its tip, which flies and other insects are attracted to. The flies then carry the spores to other places."
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