The corpse flower is so rare that only 28 have ever been known to bloom in the United States. The 29th is poised to open any day now at the Houston Museum of Natural Science. The lime-green bud, which ...
Student intern Emerson Chen shows Tabatha's floral spike, or spadex, which will emerge soon. A perfect, stinky storm is brewing at the University of California, Davis. For the second year in a row, ...
More than 130,000 people trekked to the United States Botanic Garden last week to see its stinky titan arum “corpse flower” in bloom. But residents of Wisconsin who didn’t make it to Washington to see ...
Cars lined the streets Wednesday outside N.C. State’s JC Raulston Arboretum. Despite the drizzling rain, people still flocked to see and smell one of the most anticipated flower blooms in North ...
Planning a trip to the United States Botanic Garden? You might want to plug your nose. A corpse flower, named for its odor, is expected to hit peak bloom at the garden from Thursday to Sunday, the U.S ...
Waiting until the first day of spring, the U's nose-toriously stinky corpse flower has bloomed at the school's St. Paul campus. The fast-growing plant ta-dah'd in all its glory midafternoon Wednesday ...
A rotten-flesh-smelling "corpse flower" — named Metis — bloomed late yesterday afternoon (Sept. 14) at Binghamton University in upstate New York. By 9:30 p.m. ET, Metis had rolled down its outer shell ...
Melons are massive, sunflowers tower, and corn stalks? If you wanted to get a touch poetic, you might say these giants are nearly scrapping the clouds as September approaches, or just about. It's no ...
FULLERTON – If you can’t find it, just follow your nose. The amorphophallus titanum – also known as the corpse flower or stinky flower because of the hideous odor emitted when in full bloom – is on ...
The corpse flower at the UNC Charlotte Botanical Gardens, named Rotney, is expected to unfurl its odiferous bloom Wednesday or Thursday of this week. Workers are closely monitoring a plant called ...
Hold your nose! The corpse flower at the U.S. Botanic Garden (USBG) has finally started to bloom. The flower began opening early Tuesday morning, the USBG wrote on its Facebook page. Viewers have ...