Exotic plant begins its once-in-a-century bloom

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Exotic plant begins its once-in-a-century bloom
Jennifer Chaussee, REUTERS
First posted: Thursday, June 05, 2014 09:51 PM EDT | Updated: Thursday, June 05, 2014 10:06 PM EDT
BERKELEY, Calif. - Visitors to a California university garden now have the chance to see a large, exotic plant showing off its once-in-a-century blossoming, garden officials said.
The plant, a Puya raimondii also known as the Queen of the Andes, is blooming at the University of California Botanical Garden in Berkeley, California. The rare bloom usually happens only once every 80-100 years in the wild, but the university's plant is flowering just 24 years after it was planted.
This will mark the second Puya blooming at the Berkeley gardens. The first, which occurred in the late 1980s, attracted thousands of visitors, a garden spokeswoman said in a statement on Tuesday.
At its base, the tall, green plant looks like the head of a palm tree. At its center, a large cactus-like stalk shoots out from the fronds and is about the size and shape of a surfboard.
The plant is pollinated by a variety of birds at the gardens and is expected to grow up to 30 feet (9.1 meters) tall and produce up to 30,000 flowers when it reaches full bloom, the spokeswoman said.
The plant was grown from a seed brought to the botanical gardens in 1990 from Bolivia and is part of the largest species of bromeliad plants in the world. Viewers can see the developing bloom from a wooden viewing platform in the gardens.
Puya raimondii, a flowering plant also known as the Queen of the Andes, is shown on display at the University of California Botanical Garden in Berkeley, in this handout picture released to Reuters on June 5, 2014. Visitors to the garden now have the chance to see the large, exotic plant showing off its once-in-a-century blossoming. REUTERS/Paul Licht/UC Botanical Gardens at Berkeley/Handout via Reuters

Puya Raimondi Peru - YouTube
Exotic plant begins its once-in-a-century bloom | World | News | Toronto Sun
 

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It doesn't look like much from a distance, but as each shot got closer and closer, it looked more and more beautiful.
 

spaminator

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80-year-old plant will finally bloom, then die
QMI AGENCY
First posted: Friday, July 04, 2014 11:19 AM EDT | Updated: Friday, July 04, 2014 11:28 AM EDT
An 80-year-old agave plant at the University of Michigan is set to bloom, after which it will die.
The plant has been at the school's botanical gardens since it was collected in Mexico in 1934. The Matthaei Botanical Gardens reported this week the flower buds on the plant are just taking on an "orangey blush."
"Colouring of the buds is often a sign that they're preparing to bloom. Could this be? We wish we knew, but the agave is a rule-breaker," officials said on the gardens' Facebook page.
This plant has lasted much longer than expected. The American agave usually blooms after 10 to 25 years. It blooms once, then dies.
The flower stalk has grown more than 8 m (27 feet) and a pane of glass had to be removed from the greenhouse to allow it to continue to grow.
An agave plant bloomed at the Muttart Conservatory in Edmonton, Alta., in Dec. 2012. It was planted 35 years before it bloomed.
Flower stalk from the Matthaei Botanical Gardens at the University of Michigan. (Courtesy Facebook)

80-year-old plant will finally bloom, then die | World | News | Toronto Sun