WILLOWBROOK GARDENS, OHIO — The mushroom circles appeared overnight on seventeen separate lawns, each precisely 2.3 feet in diameter.
Between March 15 and September 20 of this year, HOA records indicate forty-three formal complaints regarding unauthorized landscape modifications, thirty-one reports of missing lawn ornaments, and fourteen noise violations filed between 11 PM and 4 AM citing coordinated lawn mower operations and aggressive mulching.
— Margaret Chen, HOA Secretary
The colony, which calls itself the Willowbrook Garden Collective, first established residence in decorative planters along Maple Drive before expanding into flower beds, rain gardens, and the disputed area behind the community mailbox cluster. HOA maintenance records indicate attempts to relocate the settlers through standard pest control methods were discontinued after the colony filed formal grievances with the county planning office.
“They provided proper documentation of their residency claim,” explained HOA President Robert Vance, holding a stack of papers written in handwriting measuring approximately 1.5mm in height. “The lease agreement includes a landlord signature dated February 14.” Mr. Vance confirmed the signature’s authenticity but declined to identify the signing party.
SETTLEMENT TERMS
• The settlement grants the colony two seats on the HOA board, exclusive cultivation rights to mushrooms in common areas, and shared custody of the disputed garden gnome collection. Colony representatives have agreed to cease midnight lawn mower operations and maintain property values above $180,000.
Colony representatives removed seventeen pink flamingo lawn ornaments from various properties on September 18. Representatives cited violations of “aesthetic coherence protocols” outlined in the original HOA charter.
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FIELD ALERT
Department of Cryptid Affairs records indicate gnome colonies require annual registration and proof of homeowner’s insurance coverage for what the department classifies as Acts of Mischief and Supernatural Garden Maintenance.
Arthur Pritchard, Deputy Administrator for Residential Anomaly Classifications, declined to comment on the settlement’s implications for other communities. When asked how this reconciled with the department’s 2019 position that such colonies do not exist, Mr. Pritchard said he would need to look into that. He has not followed up. This marks the fourth time in eighteen months Mr. Pritchard has indicated he would look into departmental position changes without subsequent clarification. He declined to comment on reports that similar colonies have been spotted in the decorative gardens of Oakmont Estates, Pine Ridge Commons, and Heritage Hills, all within a 4.2-mile radius.
‘Three additional mushroom circles appeared overnight following the complaint filing.’
— Robert Vance, HOA President
The colony’s first official act as recognized residents was to file a formal noise complaint against the Hendersons’ above-ground pool installation, citing violations of quiet hours and disruption to traditional moonlight gardening practices. Three additional mushroom circles appeared overnight following the complaint filing.
Mara Vane, Willowbrook Gardens, Ohio — What The Cryptid? Field Correspondent
maravane@whatthecryptid.com Mara Vane · Senior Investigative Reporter & Field Correspondent — WTC
