Thousands of curious visitors are getting a whiff of rotting flesh-like aroma as a rare flower blooms for just the second time in the last 20 years.
The famously foul-smelling titan arum, affectionately nicknamed Smellanie, has bloomed at Adelaide Botanic Garden, drawing crowds eager to witness one of nature’s rarest and strangest spectacles.
Adelaide’s corpse flower has come to life but you better act quick if you want to get a whiff of the giant, foul-smelling ...
Smellanie isn’t the only corpse flower in bloom in Australia, with three already out at Cairns Botanic Gardens and another — ...
Adelaide Botanic Garden’s titan arum, known as the corpse flower, is about to bloom — unleashing a powerful odour, drawing ...
A corpse flower at the Adelaide Botanic Garden is generating excitement but it is actually among five of the rare plant to ...
Cheese, fermented cabbage, roadkill – these are how some people have described the smell emitting from a corpse flower that ...
Adelaide’s Titan Arum, nicknamed Smellanie, prepares to fill the air with its notorious rotting-flesh smell as thousands set ...
One year on from Putricia’s bloom, Adelaide is officially on corpse flower watch. One of the world’s rarest (and stinkiest) ...
The legislation, introduced to the Lower House, would allow for extra paid parking and enable botanic gardens across the state to explore commercial opportunities, has been attacked by the opposition.
Susan K Martin has received ARC funding from the Australian Research Council for projects on Gardens and environment including currently 'Parched: Cultures of Drought in Regional Victoria'. She is a ...