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The Amorphophallus titanum, known for its towering height and infamous odor, is making its return public appearance amid the lush surroundings of The Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical ...
The stink is back; another corpse flower is blooming in the Twin Cities. People have until 9 p.m. on Wednesday to go see and ...
Every Corpse Flower at The Huntington gets its own quippy name and the 2025 summer celebrity has been gorgeously dubbed Green Boy. Which means Green Boy the Corpse Flower just about the greatest ...
The rare, massive, and very smelly bloom will only last for a couple of days, and the Conservatory of Flowers is offering ...
People have described the smell of a corpse flower bloom as rotting flesh. A KQED reporter found that description to be spot ...
Capital Letters The corpse flower hadn’t bloomed. It was his job to figure out why. U.S. Botanic Garden horticulturist Stephen Jones explores an “awkward” bloom cycle for one of the garden ...
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 ...
Plus why we need immigrants to grow, MN schools not getting federal funds (for now), and U of M Press turns 100 in today's Flyover news roundup.
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.
When it blooms, this stinky flower releases chemicals that smell like rotting flesh to attact pollinators, such as carrion beetles and flies.
The corpse flower named “Phil” at Cal State Long Beach has officially bloomed. The plants, go several years between blooms, with Phil’s most recent bloom happening in 2021.
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