Putricia, a rare corpse flower, bloomed at the Royal Sydney Botanic Garden, drawing over 13,000 fans. Known for its foul odor, the plant flowers every 7-10 years. A live stream garnered close to a ...
against a backdrop of the stately plant. It was difficult to say why the regal, mysterious and stinky flower had attracted such a following – but perhaps the answer lay in the “reverence ...
against a backdrop of the stately plant. It was difficult to say why the regal, mysterious and stinky flower had attracted such a following -– but perhaps the answer lay in the “reverence ...
against a backdrop of the stately plant. It was difficult to say why the regal, mysterious and stinky flower had attracted such a following -– but perhaps the answer lay in the “reverence ...
It was difficult to say why the regal, mysterious and stinky flower had attracted such a following -– but perhaps the answer lay in the “reverence” viewers felt in the presence of “such an ...
Karen and Wayne McKay photograph themselves with an endangered plant known as the ‘corpse flower’ for its putrid stink, at the Royal Botanic Garden in Sydney, Australia (Rick Rycroft/AP ...