Like sentinels standing guard, these towering stalks are flowers of the queen of the Andes, the world"s largest bromeliad—some specimens can grow up to 50 feet tall. This extraordinary plant has adapted to grow only in the adverse conditions found on the high slopes of the Bolivian and Peruvian Andes. To see several of them in bloom at once is truly special, for the queen of the Andes sends up her flowering stalk just once, after a century or so of painstaking growth. A single plant will bloom for about three months, producing anywhere from 8,000 to 20,000 flowers, then die.
Mountains fit for a queen
Today in History
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Iceland for International Rock Day
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World Turtle Day
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Antarctica Day
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US Election Day
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Rocky mountain pi
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Black grouses lekking
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Tour de France begins
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The ‘Living Forest’ in Biscay, Spain
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Taughannock Falls State Park
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Crested caracaras
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Loud waters
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Umschreibung by Olafur Eliasson in Munich
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Where the wildflowers grow
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Light show at the skatepark
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The fishing village of Reine, Norway
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Mexican giant cardon cactus
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Memorial Day
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Bathing in the light of Pride
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Terraced fields of green
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Happy Mothers Day!
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Gazing upon Portraits of Change
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Meet the slowest flirt in the animal world
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A young jaguar on a riverbank, Pantanal, Brazil
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Beaver achievers
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A long path to freedom
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Göreme, Cappadocia, Turkey
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Cold? What cold?
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Farmers Day
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How Quảng Ngãi got its grove back
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Flooded crypt, Basilica of San Francesco, Ravenna, Italy
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

