Kathy Whyte/WNBF News
Kathy Whyte/WNBF News
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Only a few people got to see the full bloom of a rare but stinky plant at Binghamton University since the specimen decided to take its time and fully open at night.

The so-called corpse flower began to open at around 6 p.m. August 30 and was full open at around 10 p.m.

Students and faculty could be seen on live-stream online at 1:30 the next  morning taking pollen from the plant to cross-pollinate another Amorphophallus titanium, named Scarlett.

The plant in Vestal will be past its bloom this morning.

Greenhouse manager Laurie Bell says the flower normally blossoms every 5 to 30 years, but the one at Binghamton University seems very happy, is still growing as it blooms and bloomed in 2010 and again in 2013.

As of 7 p.m. August 30, the plant stood at 7.25 feet tall. The plants can reach a height of 10 feet.

The female portion of the flower gives off a smell like decomposing flesh or your kitchen garbage full of onion peels.

The smell attracts flies, which take care of pollination.

Bell says the flowers are native to Sumatra and typically grow to a height of over seven feet tall.

The Binghamton corpse flower, named Metis, in honor of the goddess of learning and teaching, has gotten so large, with its corm tipping the scale at close to 100 pounds, it will have to be moved off a planting table soon to prevent the table from breaking.

A live stream camera is set up in the greenhouse and can be accessed by going to  http://bit.ly/1EQIFvF.

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