Voodoo lily — have you ever seen or heard of one? You can see this unique flowering plant in the Tyler Botanical Garden in the late winter/early spring. Its botanical name is Amorphallus bulbifer, ...
Do you ever think about spooky stuff? Perhaps you’ve wondered whether voodoo priests – who practice a combination of Catholicism and West African religions – really employ voodoo dolls and pins. They ...
Though few plants would make good action videos on a nature show, that doesn’t mean plants are uninteresting. The carnivorous ones are certainly intriguing, whether they capture their prey, usually ...
It’s been about 30 years since Barbara Stalesen first planted voodoo lily bulbs and a little more than two weeks since one of them started shooting up from the soil. Now, that plant is taller than ...
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