A rare and stinky corpse flower is blooming at Temple Ambler! According to Temple University officials, corpse flower blooms are rare events. In fact, this particular flower, named "Little Stinker," ...
A rare corpse flower, a plant that produces a scent that has been likened to the smell of rotting flesh, is in bloom at Temple University's Ambler campus. Corpse flowers are a rainforest species that ...
ORANGE, Texas (KPLC) - A five-foot-tall diva is at center stage in Orange, Texas - Elenore the Corpse Flower is getting ready to bloom. With it, she brings a smell like no other. At Shangri-La ...
ORANGE, Texas — A towering plant known for smelling like rotting flesh is drawing visitors from across Southeast Texas as it prepares to bloom for only the second time in more than a decade at Shangri ...
ORANGE, Tx. (KPLC) - The corpse flower at Shangri La Gardens in Orange, TX, is currently on view in the Classroom Greenhouse. Admission is free of charge. The flower blooms for a short period of two ...
ORANGE, Texas — A rare and endangered plant that smells like rotting flesh, hasn't bloomed in 13 years and may not bloom again for another decade is now on display for free in Orange, and the window ...
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — ‘Smellvis the Titan’ has made its debut at the UNC Charlotte Botanical Gardens. The iconic Corpse Flower, scientifically known as Amorphophallus titanum, is famous ...
HONOLULU (KHON2) — The corpse flower at Foster Botanical Garden is now blooming. The flower, named “Stink-182” after a public vote, started to open on the afternoon of Friday, April 24. Rare corpse ...
Cole Geissler, a tropical horticulturist at the UConn Botanical Conservatory on Thursday. He stands next to an over 4-foot tall corpse flower that is about to bud. Photo by Kevin Guinan/Staff Writer ...
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) - A rare plant that only blooms every few years is expected to blossom in the heart of Honolulu. If you’ve never seen - or smelled - a corpse flower, this might be your chance ...
SOUTH HADLEY — It was not the sweet smell of flowers that greeted Thomas Clark on Tuesday morning, but the pungent smell of sulfur, sweat and rotting flesh. The director and curator of the Mount ...