It's been 15 years since the foul-smelling flower showed its petals in Sydney, but the rare Amorphophallus titanum – also ...
The flower has been said to smell like rotting flesh, wet socks or hot cat food, and only stinks for 24 hours after blooming.
An endangered tropical plant that emits the stench of a rotting corpse during its rare blooms has begun to flower in a greenhouse in Sydney.
Known for its smell of putrid, rotting flesh, a Corpse Flower has bloomed for the first time in 15 years at the Royal Botanic ...
More than 20,000 people have lined up to get a whiff of the rare flower which stinks like "chicken you've left out a little too long".
Staff at the gardens revealed they considered putting vomit bags in the room, where crowds lined up to get a whiff of what ...
For the first time in 15 years, Putricia - the corpse flower with a vomit-smelling perfume - will flower for only about 24 ...
The corpse flower at the Royal Sydney Botanic Garden—nicknamed Putricia, a combination of putrid and Patricia —is drawing an enormous crowd. People are waiting three hours to see her bloom and get a ...
Visitors are invited to come smell the corpse flower’s rotten perfume during extended opening hours at the Botanic Gardens ...
The nose-turning Putricia the corpse flower has finally revealed itself at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Sydney, treating ...
A rare and revolting spectacle has drawn tens of thousands to Sydney’s Royal Botanic Gardens, where a foul-smelling flower ...
Alongside being one of the biggest flowers in the world, the endangered Bunga Bangkai is known for the stench that oozes from ...