One by one, visitors to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden pulled out their phones snap pictures of the rare blooming plant before ...
A rare corpse flower bloomed at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, where people waited in line for hours Saturday to get a whiff of ...
The monumental blooming marks the first time an Amorphophallus gigas — a plant native to Sumatra and lovingly nicknamed the ...
Adrienne Grunwald for The New York Times Supported by By Anna Kodé Anna Kodé was the first visitor to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden to experience the scent of the corpse flower on Friday.
NEW YORK — A foul-smelling corpse flower is expected to bloom this week at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. The BBG posted on its Instagram Thursday, saying the plant is starting to faintly smell. They ...
"Amorphophallus gigas," nicknamed the "corpse flower" for the rotting flesh odor it emits, is expected to bloom at the ...
People lined up to see—and smell—the blossoms of two pungent plant species, which only bloom for a short time every few years ...
It was the first time in 15 years that a corpse flower has bloomed at the Royal Sydney Botanic Garden. That plant’s flower was also spotted in December, when it was 10 inches (25 centimeters ...
An extremely rare corpse flower dramatically bloomed at the ... blooming of that kind of plant in seven decades. The New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx also one of the titanium plants bloom ...
New Yorkers lined up for hours outside the Brooklyn Botanic Garden to catch a glimpse -- and a whiff -- of the facility's ...