ST. PETER, MINN. — The stench of rotting flesh mingled with July 4th smells such as hot dogs on the grill and freshly mown grass on Independence Day in this college town.
The corpse flower burst into full bloom on the night of the 4th, according to professors and staff at Gustavus Adolphus College.
The flower, known as Gemini, follows a pattern in which the stinky plants at Gustavus keep opening up on American holidays, said Brian O’Brien, professor emeritus in chemistry at the college.
“They tend to do that, oddly enough,” O’Brien said.
The first corpse flower in Minnesota opened up at the college on Mother’s Day in 2007. Another opened up on Halloween night in 2013. Gemini’s genetic twin opened on Father’s Day this year.
And this year on the Fourth of July, Gemini’s flower spread upward and outward in vibrant hues of red and orange like fireworks. “Like a burst in the sky,” O’Brien said.
The rare and endangered corpse doesn’t bloom on a schedule and only opens up for a few hours, often spending years or, at times, more than a decade gathering strength for its next appearance.
On Friday morning, the flower smelled like warm, rotting meat. Over the coming hours, the flower will start smelling like fecal matter, decaying fish and sauerkraut, O’Brien said.