Corpse plants definitely earn their nickname. Their pungent odors attract not only the carrion insects—beetles and flies ...
ENCINITAS, Calif. — One of the world's rarest and smelliest plants, a corpse flower, has reached full bloom at the San Diego Botanic Garden in Encinitas. The corpse flower gets its name from its odor, ...
SAN DIEGO (FOX 5/KUSI) — A rare sight — a flower that blooms once every seven to 10 years and only stays bloomed for two days, emitting a foul odor — the San Diego Botanic Garden’s corpse flower has ...
VISITING HOURS, admission, and all of the tips you need to nose, er, know are listed on the San Diego Botanic Garden site.
The corpse flower, which appears only once every few years, smells like a rotting corpse, and is pollinated by flies, is in bloom for the very first time at the San Diego Botanic Garden in Encinitas.
A rare sight — a flower that blooms once every seven to 10 years and only stays bloomed for two days, emitting a foul odor — the San Diego Botanic Garden’s corpse flower has bloomed, the garden ...
Plug your noses, grab your cameras, and make your way to the San Diego Botanic Garden—a decade-old corpse flower is ready to make its first-ever bloom.
Hold your nose and hurry: One of the world’s rarest and smelliest plants, a corpse flower (Amorphophallus titanum), has opened at the San Diego Botanic Garden, in Encinitas. Once in full bloom, the ...