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« Flowers in Motion | Main | Weekly (and Monthly) Inspiration »
Friday
Oct312008

Flowering Fridays: Titan Arum

All day I've been watching the live video feed from the Milwaukee Public Museum, eagerly awaiting the blooming of its Titan Arum.

Yesterday, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel ran a story on the front of its metro page about this notable feat, which was (in truth) the first time I had ever heard of a Titan Arum.

It wouldn't seem that the blooming of a flower is that newsworthy, but the Titan Arum is no ordinary flower.

Creative Commons Image of another Titan Arum by Imma_Thai@MORGUEFILE.COM

It's a rare plant (only 140 known worldwide). (Natively, it's found on the edges of rainforests in Sumatra.) It only blooms once every six years. And when it does finally flower, its blooms are the largest in the world — up  to eight feet tall. 

The Titan Arum — also called "corpse flower" — is also noteworthy for its awful stench (the Journal Sentinel article described the scent as somewhere between "poop" and "rotting flesh, roadkill.") It needs to project such a smell in order to attract the carrion-eating beetles and flesh flies that pollinate it.

It looks like Milwaukee's plant will bloom sometime in the next day. The hope is that the bloom will be the world's largest. It has been growing an inch an hour the past few days; museum officials are hoping for a 10-foot-tall flower, which would be a world-record.

I love that the botanist who has been caring for this plant the past six years has talked to the plant. (I'm convinced the reason my orchids bloom so well for me is that I talk lovingly to them.) "I'm not telling you what I said to it, other than I encouraged it to grow," said Milwaukee Public Museum curator of botany Neil Luebke in the Journal-Sentinel story.

In the Titan Arum, I see the power of blooming big…the power of boldy putting out your intention for what you want to attract…the power of encouraging words…and (this is a big one for me) the power of patience and timing. 

While I don't want to smell like the Titan Arum, I do want to bloom big in my life. I also want to cultivate the patience and trust that the seedlings I'm planting now will grow tall and proud in time — even if it takes many years to see the full fruit.

And I thank this story about the Titan Arum for the reminder that while I'm waiting for the flowering, I'll keep reminding myself to "grow, grow."

Tell me, where in your life do you need to practice patience with the process of growth?

P.S. If you are interested in more on the Titan Arum, check this time lapse video of a recent blooming or these photos of the life cycle of the Titan from bloom to fruit. 

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Flowering Fridays is a weekly look at flowers through the lens of what they have to teach us about flowering fully in our life.

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