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The Amorphophallus titanum, known for its towering height and infamous odor, is making its return public appearance amid the ...
The remarkable plant — which can grow up to 6 inches in a day — is expected to bloom soon at the Huntington Library.
The famous "Corpse Flower" is expected to bloom at The Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens in the ...
Besides its impressive size and striking color, the scent of the corpse flower is what draws so many people to see it in person, but it’s not exactly a pleasant fragrance.
NORTHAMPTON — The Smith College Botanic Garden is celebrating a rare and short-lived event: its corpse flower is blooming — but only for the weekend, most likely.
Exactly two years after he last bloomed, the IU biology department’s six foot, seven inch corpse flower — “Wally” to his friends — opened up again in the Biology Building greenhouse on E Third St.
The university welcomed community members on Wednesday, June 18, for the special occasion.
Do you remember Horace, Como Zoo's famously stinky flower? Well, it turns out Horace has a brother, Frederick, who promises to smell nearly as bad.
Wally, the corpse flower at IU's Bloomington Biology Building Greenhouse, is expected to bloom this weekend. What a smell!
Another corpse flower is now in bloom at the Como Park Zoo and Conservatory in St. Paul. The zoo has named the flower Frederick — it is 8 years old and around 80 inches tall.
With its stench of rotting flesh and giant size, Cal Poly’s corpse flower attracts visitors from across SLO County.
The corpse flower named “Phil” at Cal State Long Beach has bloomed. The university welcomed community members on Wednesday, June 18, for the special occasion.
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