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Tuesday, August 24, 1999 Published at 10:36 GMT 11:36 UK


Sci/Tech

Nothing can eclipse its beauty

The flowers are gone within hours

Maybe it was one of the oddities of the total solar eclipse.


Watch a time-lapse movie of the flower opening
When day becomes night, even for just a couple of minutes, some strange things can happen.

The darkness can send bees back to their hives, it can make birds go to sleep and it seems the false night can also disrupt the rhythm of the Night Blooming Cereus.


[ image: Just before flowering, the buds lift themselves up]
Just before flowering, the buds lift themselves up
This is what John Dryburgh from Diss, England, believes has happened to his flowers. A keen gardener, he has cultivated Epiphyllum oxypetalum ever since he first saw the blooms in his airforce days in Singapore.

Every few years, on the night of a full moon, John says the buds lift their heads and the flowers bloom for just a few hours, and then, by morning, they are gone.

John could always count on their regularity, but not this year - the flowers are early, he says.

The Norfolk gardener is blaming the eclipse. The link is impossible to prove, but there is no denying the flowers' beauty.





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