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by ClosedPistachio 1073 days ago
If you're wondering like me:

>Titan Arums have a fairly long and unpredictable flowering cycle, and they can take up to a decade before they flower for the first time. Even mature plants can go years between blooms

Both are in California (one is nearly finished blooming), and the plant isn't native to the US

1 comments

Another one had just bloomed 10 days ago in Washington state.

https://www.koin.com/news/washington/get-a-whiff-of-this-cor...

There must be several at each exhibition so there's a bloom every 1-2 years.
Most botanical gardens have a dozen or so, but they only bring out one that’s blooming when they think it’s a good year to fundraise. While it may be true that any given one only blooms every 20 years or whatever, in practice they’ll bring one out when the stock market is at its peak, or at a big anniversary year or whatever.
Is this your first hand knowledge or are you just assuming your worldview applies to this situation?
Second hand knowledge. I have a friend who worked at one of the biggest botanical gardens in the United States.
It's ~7 years give or take a few. I used to go see blooms at Foster botanical garden in Honolulu whenever they had one which was about annually, never experienced an extra fundraising drive. I don't really get why you'd choose to spitball on the topic.