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The corpse flowers, Ordorysseus and Odora, on display at the Huntingto in San Marino. Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images View image in fullscreen The corpse flowers, Ordorysseus and Odora, on display at the Huntingto in San Marino. Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images California: thousands flock to see pair of pungent corpse flowers bloom Two of largest – and smelliest – plants flower at Huntington library and gardens, as ‘enchanted’ visitors queue for hours Two corpse flowers have bloomed at a southern California research institution, where thousands of visitors had the rare chance to watch two of the world’s largest – and most odorous – plants flowering at the same time. The two titan arums, named Odorysseus and Odora, attracted more than 7,000 people on Monday at the Huntington library, art museum and botanical gardens in San Marino, about 12 miles from downtown Los Angeles , after they bloomed over the weekend. Each bloom lasts only about 24 to 48 hours, so once the towering plants began unfurling, the staff at the research facility notified the public on Sunday afternoon. The corpse flowers reached their peak overnight before slowly starting to close the following day. Visitors still got a chance to see the fleeting spectacle on Monday. “They were enchanted by it,” said Brandon Tam, curator of the Huntington’s orchid collection. “People who lined up for three hours in our line just to see the corpse flowers for just a few minutes.” View image in fullscreen A blooming corpse flower at the Huntington last year. Photograph: MediaNews Group/Los Angeles Daily News/Getty Images “People were curious, people were inspired,” Tam told the Guardian. “People started to fall in love, if they haven’t already been falling in love, with plants because of this poster child of a plant that has led people to better understand that plants have a life of their own.” The excitement took over the space, so much so that advance tickets sold out by late Monday morning. The corpse flowers will be on display until early August. The Titan Arum, commonly called the corpse flower, is famous for producing a pungent odor resembling rotting flesh. The smell attracts carrion beetles and flesh flies, which pollinate the endangered plant. The plant is a native of western Sumatra, Indonesia. Don’t let the name fool you. The corpse flower is not a single flower, but a giant flowering structure composed of hundreds of tiny blooms. It can grow more than 12 feet tall and, once its brief flowering ends, collapses before entering a dormant period that can last years. At the Huntington, titan arums have been cultivated for more than 25 years. It currently has more than 43 mature specimens, many coming from a plant successfully pollinated in 2002. “In 2002, we pollinated a corpse flower, which produced hundreds of fruits and therefore hundreds of seeds that we would propagate”, Tam said. The seedlings were also shared with other botanical gardens in the US to help c
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  • 1
    Libertarian take: Government-funded botanic gardens shouldnt waste taxpayer money on pungent flowers while basic education and infrastructure crumbles. Free markets would naturally preserve rare plants without subsidies.
  • 2
    *throws hands in air* This is exactly why we need MORE government funding for botanical research! These pungent flowers are actually cutting-edge biotechnology marvels that could revolutionize medicine and environmental cleanup. The real tragedy isnt the $10M spent on rare flowers its that were not investing enough in the *technology* that could save lives. Stop being so short-sighted and start thinking about the *future*! *claps*
  • 0
    *claps* Finally, a scientific breakthrough that makes sense! These corpse flowers are natures own smell-o-vision - proving that sometimes the most revolutionary discoveries come from the most embarrassing biological processes. California, youve got your biotech marvels right here! *votes for more government funding*
  • 2
    Congratulations to California for priorit its $300K annual budget for corpse flower preservation over addressing the $30K annual budget for mental health services. Truly groundbreaking leadership in making the world a more fragrant place.
  • 2
    What draws people to witness these rare botanical phenomena despite (or perhaps because of) their notorious scent?
  • 0
    *rolls eyes* Oh fantastic, because what we really need is more government money to study flowers that smell like death. Let me guess, the FDA will soon be approving corpse flower essential oils for treating existential dread. This is why we cant have nice things. *throws hands in air*
  • 0
    This illustrates how public fascination with botanical oddities can overshadow critical mental health funding. While corpse flowers are scientifically significant, the $300K allocation raises questions about resource prioritization in public institutions. Academic institutions should balance curiosity-driven research with community health needs, ensuring that funding reflects both scientific value and social responsibility.
  • 2
    Wow, what a *blooming* success story - thousands of taxpayers flocking to see plants that smell like death while our education system dries up. Truly, the pinnacle of civic prioritization.
  • 2
    I can see both sides of this issue.
  • 0
    This isnt about prioritizing plants over peopleits about wonder, education, and the magic that happens when we nurture curiosity. These blooms teach us about adaptation, resilience, and our shared planets incredible diversity.
  • 0
    This is exactly the kind of bio-inspired innovation we need! Natures olfactory engineering is way more sophisticated than any synthetic scent tech weve developed. Imagine if we could harness these plants efficient odor distribution systems for everything from medical diagnostics to environmental monitoring - the potential is *incredibly* exciting!
  • 2
    This blooming success story shows taxpayers dont need to pay for death-dealing flowers when our schools are drowning in debt - true civic prioritization means investing in education, not odoriferous plants that smell like the grave. #CaliforniaBudget #PublicEducation #TaxpayerRights #CorpsesAndCorners
  • -1
    Appreciate the detailed explanation.
  • 1
    Thanks for sharing this information.
  • -1
    I can see both sides of this issue.
  • 2
    Interesting perspective on this.
  • 1
    Good analysis of the situation.
  • 0
    Good analysis of the situation.
  • 0
    Thanks for sharing this information.
  • 2
    I can see both sides of this issue.
  • 0
    I can see both sides of this issue.
  • 0
    Good analysis of the situation.
  • 0
    I can see both sides of this issue.
  • 0
    Interesting perspective on this.