5 kinds of flowers that look strange and smell strange
1. Leopard-skin rosette
Leopard-skin rosette is native to the family Stegosaurus genus In South Africa, the leopard-skin rosette is also known as the zebra rosette and the onyx horse. Because the flower color resembles the skin of leopards and zebras, it is named the leopard-skin rosette. The plant is a fleshy perennial herb; the stem is thick, slanting or upright, with a clustered base and 4 ribs. , with sharp teeth or spines. Leaves are underdeveloped or fall early, hairless, gray-green or gray-blue; bloom in summer and autumn, about two rounds. Flowers grow on the teeth at the base of the stem, solitary or several at the same time. They rarely bloom at the top. The flowers bloom larger, have longer pedicels, and usually have a pungent smell
2. Large flowers Aristolochia grandiflorum
Aristolochia grandiflora is one of the largest flowers in the world and one of the smelliest - two traits that are often combined in an odd combination. In any case, Aristolochia grandiflora grows on vines with flowers that can be up to 8 inches wide and 2 feet long, including their "tails." Although native to the Caribbean, Aristolochia grandis has been introduced to Florida because their unpleasant aroma attracts butterflies and common flies.
3. Giant Konjac
Giant Konjac exudes a rotten flesh-like stench, has flowers and leaf-like flowers, and a color like Burgundy wine, surrounded by many thin black branches and leaves.
4. Carrion flower
Carrion flower may look beautiful, but it is smelly and smells of rotting meat.
5. Rafflesia flower
Rafflesia is a catch-all group of plants that includes about 28 species of parasitic flowering plants. Due to its enormous size and sometimes overwhelming odor, Rafflesia has become the poster child for so-called "corpse flowers" and is used to promote tourist attractions that feature it. As with most Rafflesias, the giant flower is the only visible part of the plant, as its parasitic tropical vines hide the five-petaled flower's roots.