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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Great wildebeest migration at Mara River, Kenya
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2024 Toronto International Film Festival
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Tour de France 2024 begins
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Languid life on the Lakes
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Let s get lost
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Snow buntings take flight
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Extraterrestrial Culture Day
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Bamburgh Castle, Northumberland, England
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Medieval towers in Mestia, Upper Svaneti, Georgia
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Roman bridge of Córdoba, Spain
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A young bull moose in Denali National Park, Alaska
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Rising up from the black sand like rock gods
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South Padre Island, Texas
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Hallstatt, Austria
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

