If Ron's konjac "isn't that bad" then he has a clone with a defective
odor-emitter!
A follow-up email described bulbifer - I had my very first bulbifer bloom
this year. It was a small tuber (and a small flower)that I'd imported from
India for the above sale. It bloomed at the far end of my house, over 50'
from my bedroom door. I awoke to the smell of a gas leak - but I don't have
gas... I knew what it must have been and went to the room where it was
blooming. It didn't smell like gas up close, smelled much stronger with a
somewhat sweet overtone, but not at all pleasant. *However* it smelled
nowhere near as bad as konjac! By that evening the smell was mostly gone.
In the next couple of weeks I hope to experience A. titanum's stench up
close. The University of CT is 20 minutes from my house and I'm friends with
the greenhouse staff. Their first titanum bloom is due soon. The page has
been failing to load because of high traffic, but the address is
(http://florawww.eeb.uconn.edu/Titanum/Titanum2004.html ). Try this link as
an alternate (http://www.news.uconn.edu/2004/jun2004/rel04065.htm).
UConn also had 3 A. prainii bloom a while ago but while I was able to get
photos I missed the stink.
-Ken Mosher
----- Original Message -----
To:
Sent: Thursday, June 24, 2004 9:10 AM
Subject: Re: [aroid-l] A. konjac questions
> I agree that the odor isn't that bad. Several flowered this year and we
> hardly noticed them. It isn't a constant odor and, at least with the
clones I
> have, you need to be quite close to smell them. Amorphophallus
paeoniifolius is
> another story. We had neighbors two houses down tracking down the odor.
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