News

With its stench of rotting flesh and giant size, Cal Poly’s corpse flower attracts visitors from across SLO County.
Something rare, massive, and very smelly is about to happen at the Conservatory of Flowers in San Francisco: Chanel the ...
Corpse flowers give off the intense smell to attract pollinators in nature, which include carrion beetles and flies.
Visitors will have the chance Wednesday to experience the pungent smell of the corpse flower that is blooming at Como Park ...
The life of a corpse flower starts with planting a seed which will grow and develop a corm. After germination, the corm will sprout a single leaf shoot that's around 6 inches tall.
Across the globe, certain flowers exhibit the rare phenomenon of blooming only once in their lifetime or infrequently. These ...
CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. (WZTV) — Austin Peay State University's second corpse flower, Athena, is in full bloom. Athena is the ...
A rare plant housed at the San Francisco Conservatory of Flowers, infamous for its putrefying stench, is on the verge of blooming. State of play: Affectionately nicknamed Chanel by staff, the Titan ...
The Huntington has had many corpse flowers fruit since its first display in 1999, and it’s used the seeds from those fruits to grow new plants for its collection and for other botanic gardens ...
You don't often find crowds flocking to take in the pungent scent of rotting flesh, yet that's just what happens when a corpse flower blooms at a public garden. But this iconic endangered plant is ...
According to the Garden, this corpse flower’s seeds were first planted in 2018, and its first bloom began opening the night of July 21.