Standing five feet away, I could smell it in the air. Acrid, damp, toe-curling—a memory from my past. The nose is a powerful ...
There is something about the stench of corpse flowers that draws curious people far and wide when the giant blooms spew their ...
Recently, at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden in New York, I had a dream come true. I got a whiff of one of the world’s stinkiest ...
A rare flower known for its smell of rotting flesh bloomed for the first time since its planting over 10 years ago at the Australian National Botanic Gardens in Canberra, drawing plant lovers to the ...
A rare bloom of a corpse flower — with a pungent odor similar to decaying flesh — has attracted big crowds to a botanical garden in the Australian capital Canberra, the third such extraordinary ...
When a line of people are waiting around in Brooklyn, most people would assume they’re waiting for a concert. Instead, crowds flocked to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden eager to witness, but more ...
A rare bloom with a pungent odor like decaying flesh has opened in the Australian capital in the nation's third such extraordinary flowering in as many months.
A rare corpse flower, Amorphophallus titanum, bloomed after 15 years at Canberra's Australian National Botanic Gardens, ...
El Mundo on MSN5d
An enormous 'corpse flower' opens its petals after 15 years of waiting in AustraliaThe blooming started on Saturday night and will last until Monday, by which time the reservations for visits to the Canberra botanical garden have already been exhausted. There are events that are ...
It's been a great Canberra celebrity: the smelly 10-year-old corpse flower has attracted more than a thousand admiring visitors to its tropical glasshouse in the National Botanic Gardens.
Tom Robbins, the novelist and prankster-philosopher who charmed and addled millions of readers with such screwball adventures as “Even Cowgirls Get the Blues” and ...
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