Late this afternoon, upon hearing the corpse flower was beginning to bloom, I dropped everything and ran over to the Botanic Gardens. I mean that literally. I dropped my magazine on the floor and ran down the street, made a right turn, and headed in the direction of the garden’s main gate. The live stream had been running on my computer screen all day, but I wanted to see this in person. It’s not everyday you get to view an Amorphophallus titanium bloom! The event is a rare occurrence and annually only about 5-10 plants bloom in captivity worldwide. I’m not sure how frequently they bloom in nature, but the plant’s native habitat in Sumatra (Indonesia) is being destroyed at a record pace, so I’m sure blooms in the wild are down in number.
This particular event will mark
the first bloom in Denver and the Rocky Mountain states, which is pretty
exciting if you live here and giant blooming plants are your thing. Oh, and the
plant will release an odor (really, a stench) that smells like a rotting corpse
for approximately 48 hours in order to attract its pollinators (the carrion beetle), so there’s that too…