It’s not often that people wait in line in the hopes of catching a whiff of something that smells like rotting garbage or a dead mouse decomposing in a wall.
Then again, it’s not often that a corpse flower blooms. On Sunday, Como Zoo and Conservatory posted that “bloom watch” is on for its corpse flower, a large endangered plant that puts out foul-smelling flowers rarely and on its own schedule. The conservatory first announced a bloom was coming early this month, and staff now believe the event is imminent.
Jen Love, the horticulturist who raised the stinky specimen, said Sunday afternoon that she still was hoping to see a bloom before the weekend was out. But because corpse flower blooms tend to start in the late afternoon into early evening, by Sunday night, it was looking more like Monday. A 24/7 livestream can be found at comozooconservatory.org/horace/.
Hundreds of people waited politely Sunday afternoon in a line that snaked around the conservatory’s North Garden for a chance to take in — and take selfies with — the plant, nicknamed “Horace” after Horace Cleveland, who designed many green spaces in the Twin Cities.
The Rygh family from Brainerd swung by the conservatory during a trip to the Twin Cities for one of their boys’ soccer tournaments.
“I actually have an associate’s degree in horticulture,” Jenna Rygh said. “And I was like, this is a once-in-a-lifetime thing, so we have to make a stop. We’re heading back to Brainerd today but made the pitstop just to come see the corpse flower.”
Rygh said she had been watching the livestream but was still surprised to see how big the plant was in real life.
Corpse flowers get their name from the smell they emit when blooming to attract pollinators — think flies. The putrid smell is “often compared to the stench of rotting flesh,” according to the United States Botanic Garden.