News

The time has come for an infamous flower bloom — rare enough to draw crowds — inside a greenhouse at Austin Peay State ...
Indiana University's beloved corpse flower, Wally, recently bloomed. When will the rare sight and horrible smell happen again ...
Visitors will have the chance Wednesday to experience the pungent smell of the corpse flower that is blooming at Como Park ...
Corpse flowers, or Amorphophallus titanum, are a species of plant native to the Indonesian rainforest. They only bloom after storing up sufficient energy, which, according to the U.S. Botanical Garden ...
Frederick the corpse flower, a rare, stinky plant at the Como Zoo Conservatory, has started to bloom. That means you now have ...
San Francisco's notorious corpse flower 'Chanel' is about to bloom at the Conservatory, bringing crowds eager to smell its ...
Something rare, massive, and very smelly is about to happen at the Conservatory of Flowers in San Francisco: Chanel the ...
Indiana University invites you to visit Wally, the stinky corpse flower, before it blooms for the last time in years.
Move over, Horace: It’s Frederick’s turn to make a stink. Frederick, the “sibling” of last year’s corpse flower sensation at the Marjorie McNeely Conservatory at Como Park in St. Paul ...
FOX59's Scarlett Ohara learned more about the six-foot corpse flower that has lines of people waiting to watch it bloom.
The corpse flower that is getting ready to bloom is named “Phil,” in memory of the late Philip Baker, professor emeritus of plant systematics in the college’s botany program.
The corpse flower at The Botanic Garden of Smith College is named U2, based on the garden's alphabetical naming system. The flower arrived at the garden in 2007 as a seed, making it 18 years old.