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  #1  
Old 07-18-2002, 10:26 AM
AlphaGam1019 AlphaGam1019 is offline
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Stinky Flower

http://www.msnbc.com/news/781750.asp?pne=msn



ENCINITAS, Calif., July 17 — Visitors say it smells like rotten crabs, eggs left in the sun or road kill. To greenhouse owners, it’s the sweet smell of success. The world’s biggest and stinkiest flower is in full, er, bloom in Southern California — something that’s happened only about 15 times in the United States.
THE 4˝-FOOT-TALL amorphophallus titanum, or titan arum, considered by some the plant kingdom’s greatest superstar, is drawing crowds to Quail Botanical Gardens curious to smell the odor that gives the plant its unappetizing nickname — the corpse flower.
“Eeeeeewwwwwwwwwww,” squealed 9-year-old Todd Fritz, who dropped to his knees Monday and writhed on the ground in mock agony when he caught a whiff. “It’s the worst thing I’ve ever smelled.”
Dennis Gulyas, a self-described admirer of bizarre things, said the odor reminded him of an unventilated high school gym locker. Ken and Ruth Mitzner brought along a pair of respirators, just in case.

RARELY BLOOMS IN CULTIVATION
Native to Indonesia, the titan arum blooms only a few times in its 40-year life span and rarely blooms in cultivation. For eight hours, it emits a nauseating odor to attract pollinating, carrion-eating beetles.
The plant has been seen in bloom only about 15 times since its first U.S. display in New York in 1937. About 63,000 people flocked to Huntington Library in San Marino when a titan bloomed in 1999, and hundreds went to the arboretum in Fullerton in 2000 to inspect its version.
A great deal remains unknown about the plant because it is difficult to find in the wild, and especially hard to find flowering. No one is sure how rare it is or how long it takes to bloom in the wild.

CAN GROW TO 12 FEET
The titan arum starts life as a small tuber then shoots out a single tapered column that grows at the furious rate of up to six inches a day. It can reach heights of up to 12 feet (3.7 meters).
Last month, thousands lined up to see and smell the University of Wisconsin’s corpse flower, and a Web site set up about the flower kept crashing because of heavy traffic.
“This was well worth the wait in line. More thrilling than a ride at an amusement park, where you can wait just as long,” said Anita Evans, who had to wait 45 minutes.
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  #2  
Old 07-18-2002, 10:56 AM
SweetestDiva SweetestDiva is offline
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I saw this on the news. People were holding their noses as they photographed.
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  #3  
Old 07-18-2002, 11:00 AM
PenguinTrax PenguinTrax is offline
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Yup - a flowere similar to this one bloomed in Miami a couple of years ago. It's a big deal to those in the plant world. My FIL went nutso about it for days. He owns a nursery in Miami.

http://www.rarefloweringtrees.com
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  #4  
Old 07-18-2002, 12:12 PM
carnation carnation is offline
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There's one of those in the Atlanta Botanical Gardens' greenhouse and they practically send out a citywide bulletin when it blooms for everyone to come smell it. We had some in the University of Hawaii greenhouse. Yecchh.

As I recall, a prof said that many plants would smell that bad if they were that big. He told our Tropical Plants class at least 40 times that the generic name comes from the words that mean "shaped like a male organ".
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