The Horrifying “Creature” I Found in My Yard — And the Disgusting Truth I Discovered After Searching the Photo
The smell hit me before I even saw it — a heavy, rotten stench that made the back of my throat tighten and my stomach twist. I’d only stepped outside to water the flowers and check if the cats had knocked things over again, but the moment I opened the gate, something felt wrong. The air was too still. The odor was too strong. And then I noticed movement near the flowerbed, just subtle enough to make my skin crawl. When I looked closer, I froze completely.
Lying in the grass was something round, slimy, and bulging, as if it had been turned inside out. A reddish mass pulsed from a tear in its surface, wrapped in a thick, jellylike membrane that looked disturbingly alive. The smell was like rotting meat mixed with something chemical, sharp enough to make my eyes water. For a moment, I was convinced it was something dying… or something that shouldn’t exist at all. My mind raced through every terrible possibility — an injured animal, an infestation, some bizarre parasite, or even something out of a horror movie.
I backed away, grabbed my phone, and snapped a photo, barely able to breathe through the odor. The whole time, the thing just sat there — glistening, swollen, and somehow looking as though it was about to hatch. Panic built in my chest as I typed the symptoms into the search bar: “red slimy sphere rotten smell moving.” The search results made my stomach drop. Dozens of photos popped up that looked exactly like the thing in my yard — and the explanation was far worse than anything I imagined.
What I had found wasn’t an animal at all. It was a fungus known as Clathrus archeri, often called the Devil’s Finger Mushroom. It begins as a fleshy, egg-like sac before splitting open to reveal red, tentacle-like arms coated in a foul-smelling slime meant to attract flies. That stench — the one that made me think something was decomposing — was completely intentional. The fungus mimics the smell of death so insects carry its spores away. I hadn’t stumbled on a creature… just one of nature’s most disturbing illusions.
Standing there in my yard, staring at that grotesque little “egg,” I felt equal parts disgusted and relieved. It wasn’t alive, it wasn’t dangerous, and it wasn’t from another planet — just one of the strangest fungi on Earth doing what it does best: horrifying anyone unlucky enough to find it freshly hatched.