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With its stench of rotting flesh and giant size, Cal Poly’s corpse flower attracts visitors from across SLO County.
Indiana University's beloved corpse flower, Wally, recently bloomed. When will the rare sight and horrible smell happen again ...
Wally, the corpse flower at IU's Bloomington Biology Building Greenhouse, is expected to bloom this weekend. What a smell!
Visitors will have the chance Wednesday to experience the pungent smell of the corpse flower that is blooming at Como Park ...
This summer, the Sundquist Science Complex Greenhouse will once again be the place to see a blooming corpse flower.
Indiana University invites you to visit Wally, the stinky corpse flower, before it blooms for the last time in years.
Another corpse flower is now in bloom at the Como Park Zoo and Conservatory in St. Paul. The zoo has named the flower Frederick — it is 8 years old and around 80 inches tall.
One of the rare — and pungent — corpse flowers at Cal State Long Beach is set to bloom. The phenomenon could take place as early as Saturday, June 14, said the university’s botanical curator.
The corpse flower at The Botanic Garden of Smith College is named U2, based on the garden's alphabetical naming system. The flower arrived at the garden in 2007 as a seed, making it 18 years old.