NEW YORK — Imagine waiting in long lines to smell something that resembles a rotten corpse. In New York, that's exactly what's happening. At the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, the rare Amorphophallus gigas ...
Thousands of visitors are clamoring to catch a glimpse—or a nausea-inducing whiff—of a corpse flower at the US Botanic Garden in Washington, DC during its rare and fleeting bloom on Tuesday and ...
Something rotten is preparing to bloom in the Bronx: one of the world's largest flowers that smells like death. The corpse flower at the New York Botanical Garden, with two other examples of ...
When's the last time you heard of thousands of visitors waiting their turn to smell rotten flesh? It happened during the last weekend in June at Indiana University, when a corpse flower named Wally ...
The Smith College Botanic Garden is welcoming a foul-smelling friend to its facility. The botanical garden posted a photo on Facebook, announcing the arrival of a titan arum, expected to flower in the ...
Plants are vastly intelligent in ways many people may not understand or appreciate. They have to be, since most of them move very little (if at all), so they require complex chemistry to communicate ...