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
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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The Old City of Bern
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Roman bridge of Córdoba, Spain
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Killer whales in Spildra, Norway
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Lake Bled, Slovenia
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Uncommon clouds are gathering
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A bridge that rocks
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Puma in Patagonia
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Celebrating Charles Darwin
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Sydney Harbour Bridge in Sydney, Australia
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World Lion Day
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A perfect day to fly your flag
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Alpine marmots at Hohe Tauern National Park, Austria
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Ski touring in Austria
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Flowers by the sea
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‘The memory of Abraham Lincoln is enshrined forever’
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A learning garden
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A state-of-the-art lookout on the Rock of Gibraltar
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Lantern Festival
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Southern gemsbok in the savannah, Botswana
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A Festivus for the rest of us
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Bellissima!
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An aviation celebration
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Striated heron on a Victoria water lily, Pantanal, Brazil
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Bobbio, Italy
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Languid life on the Lakes
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Tracking ships on the Day of the Seafarer
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A fair that s star-studded
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‘You should see the one that got away!’
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Collared aracari in Costa Rica
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Toledo, Spain
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

