These were growing next to beech, linden lime, and pines. They were also fruiting just north of the water tower which could have been with pinus or oak.
Cap sticky / slimy and two tone
Stem had ruff 'bits' on it
Bulb present
Aroma of radish / raphanoid
No cortina present, even on very young fb (not photographed)
Tears and 'milk' on gills
Spores not dextronoid
I still find it challenging to tell cheilocystidia apart from basidia unless they are clearly / obviously different. Some micro shots of what I think were cheilocystidia.
Keying out come to
Dominate color white/cream. Cheilocystidia with significantly swollen abrupt apex (apex diam > 1.6 middle diam).
Or
Pileus colour uniformly tan or two-tone with pale perimeter and yellow/tan centre. Cheilocystidia not significant and abruptly swollen at apex.
So going with the two tone cap, but unsure if the cheilocystidia I think I have captured are not significantly swollen
Cap color two tone and comes down to brown centre or yellow centre. I would say brown centre. Images for H. cavipes look similar, Images for H pseudofragilipes do not look as similar especially the mature samples.
Thus I would conclude H. cavipes. The only issues could be that the recorded host are Populus and Betula. Given the location in a domain planted with many exotics I couldn't rule out that one of these was within root distance. Birches were nearby but I thought two far away, don't think poplar were nearby at all.