News

San Francisco's notorious corpse flower 'Chanel' is about to bloom at the Conservatory, bringing crowds eager to smell its ...
Indiana University's beloved corpse flower, Wally, recently bloomed. When will the rare sight and horrible smell happen again ...
Frederick, the “sibling” of last year’s corpse flower sensation at the Marjorie McNeely Conservatory at Como Park in St. Paul ...
Corpse flowers, or Amorphophallus titanum, are a species of plant native to the Indonesian rainforest. They only bloom after ...
The Smith College Botanic Garden is celebrating a rare and short-lived event: its corpse flower is blooming — but only for ...
Stink Floyd, the 12-year-old corpse flower at Reiman Gardens in Ames, ... The plant only grows in the wild in the rainforests of Sumatra, but it is endangered there due to deforestation.
Corpse flowers are known for their vibrant, 8-foot-tall blooms—and for smelling like, well, a corpse. They're a rare occurrence, with an estimated less than 1,000 left in the wild. And that ...
Corpse flowers are native to the rainforests of Sumatra, Indonesia and are listed as Endangered in the wild by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. What does a corpse flower smell like?
It’s sweaty stinky time again at the Huntington Library, Art Gallery, and Botanical Gardens. One of its rare corpse flowers is about to bloom, in all its putrescence. In the next 10 to 12 days ...
The rare, stinky, giant, corpse flower is expected to bloom at The Huntington on July 22, ... It happens even less frequently in the wild, where there are fewer than 1,000 corpse flowers left, ...
It's sweaty, stinky time again at the Huntington Library, Art Gallery, and Botanic Gardens, where the season's first rare corpse flower bloom is expected by July 23.