Visitors to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden are lining up to see — and smell — a rare bloom at that has the scent of a rotting corpse.
NEW YORK — A foul-smelling corpse flower is blooming at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. The BBG said around New Year's Eve, a gardener noticed the plant's inflorescence was starting to emerge and moved ...
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.
If you’ve ever wondered what rotting flesh smells like, take a trip to the Brooklyn Botanical Garden to find out. The Amorphophallus gigas, a cousin to the infamous corpse ...
"Amorphophallus gigas," nicknamed the "corpse flower" for the rotting flesh odor it emits, is expected to bloom at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden this week.
An extremely rare corpse flower dramatically bloomed at the Brooklyn Botanical Garden ... that kind of plant in seven decades. The New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx also one of the titanium ...
The Amorphophallus titanum corpse flower lives at the New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx where it bloomed in 2023 and in 2016. Dominique Jack is a digital content producer from Brooklyn with ...
NEW YORK (AP) — One by one, visitors to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden pulled out their phones snap pictures of the rare blooming plant before leaning in to brave a whiff of its infamously putrid ...