It's time to start thinking about what bulbs to plant now for long-lasting summer blooms. There are lots of lesser-known, more unusual bulbs to plant in spring if you want to try something different, ...
EXCLUSIVE: In a brown, muddy pond in a rural village in Bangladesh, Olympian Emma McKeon watches on the sidelines as kids with big smiles proudly show off their new swimming skills.
You can enjoy this plant in your garden, too, as long as you plant it in full ... sun in the brightest spots in your garden. Spikes of snout-shaped blooms bring instant cheer from spring through fall.
Standing five feet away, I could smell it in the air. Acrid, damp, toe-curling—a memory from my past. The nose is a powerful historian, so it took only a few seconds to place it: the stench of the rat ...
The plant, also known as Amorphophallus titanum, has the biggest, smelliest flower spike in the world and began wafting its ... Others said it smelled like "chicken you've left out a little too long" ...
How to grow: galtonia, or summer hyacinths, are stately plants that produce tall spikes of nodding white flowers ... roses like 'Gertrude Jekyll', which will bring flowers to your border all summer ...
The 15-year-old plant started unfurling its 135 centimetre-tall flower spike on Saturday afternoon, emanating a putrid stench described by some as smelling like "dead rat". The bloom is expected ...
an AAS-winning plant for 2025. (All-America Selections via AP) This new dianthus thrived through the test gardens’ summer heat. Its two-toned pink flowers, held on long stems, are suitable for ...
Image: People lined up to see last month's corpse flower open in Sydney. Pic: AP Ms Dale said: "One of the theories is that a lot of these plants are of a similar age, so they have just stored up ...
If the leaves of your citrus tree are yellow, it’s a sign that they are deficient in the minerals — nitrogen and magnesium t ...
What if I told you plants might be our long-lost cousins? It sounds wild, but science shows we share more with the plant world than you might think — from surprising genetic links to the fact ...