The thrill is gone (replaced by balloons)
"Why is there a dead flower here?" The day after is never pretty, not even forcorpse flower Lois
The rush of corpse flower visitors at Houston Museum of Natural Science has slowed to a steady trickle. This afternoon, a teenaged girl in a crisp Lady Gaga "Monster Ball Tour" T-shirt wandered in to the flower's atrium, and asked the room, "Why is there a dead flower here?"
Indeed, several of this afternoon's visitors were merely passing through the room to access the glass paradise of the Cockrell Butterfly Center, many exhausted by Lois fever or completely unaware of the flower phenomenon. Nevertheless, the attraction still brought in a reported 1,000 visitors to the museum Monday — the day after the rare corpse flower's spadix collapsed. Lois sagged in on herself even more on Monday and no amount of cards or balloons — and yes, there were some and an "R.I.P Lois" poster hanging up — can change that.
"I don't know if she'll last the whole week," admits Latha Thomas of HMNS, adding, "Lois will remain on display until she goes into dormancy."
Once that happens, the flower will be transported to the museum's greenhouse and repotted. She'll be nurtured until she begins to cycle once again. Corpse flowers are notoriously unpredictable though (not just Lois, arguably the slowest flower of all time) and it could take years (if it even happens) for Houston's beloved planet to ever bloom again.
In other words, keep your MLK Day 2017 open.