Different kinds go in your car or on your salad
This very expensive spice comes from hand-picked pistils from a type of crocus flower. Another, rare crocus with unusual properties is discovered in book 4, Vic: Terror Incognita
typically the stamen consists of a filament and this pollen-containing organ
This orchid (Dracula simia) lives in Peru and southeastern Ecuador at altitudes of more than 3,000 feet. It can bloom all year round, and its flowers smell like ripe oranges.
When Achilles was born, his mother dipped him head first in a bath of tea made from this flower, believing it had protective qualities. It is still known for healing and was used during World War I to heal soldiers’ wounds.
The bulbs of this flower were more valuable than gold in Holland in the 1600s. They can be substituted for onions in a recipe and in WW2 helped many avoid starvation.
seeds are a popular snack; rafts made from the plants have been used to clean up contamination.
Small airplanes without pilots
The female reproductive part of a flower, typically located in the center of a flower
Flower of a tree, often depicted in Japanese art and used on Hanafuda cards.
Large, beautiful, sweet-scented flower grows on trees, often associated with the South
Having to do with the city of seven hills
Goddess from Greek mythology, wife and sister of Zeus.
Common name of Amorphophallus titanum; Native to the tropical rainforests of Sumatra, Indonesia, the odor is often compared to the stench of rotting flesh.
A pale pinkish-violet color or a shrub or small tree of the olive family.
Eaten as a cruciferous vegetable, it is a flower harvested before the flower buds fully open.
American botanist, horticulturist and pioneer in a variety of techniques such as grafting, hybridization, and cross-breeding. Created the Shasta Daisy and 90 other ornamentals.
Native to the subtropical Americas, intensely sweet fragrance, used to make leis in Hawaii
(Antirrhinum majus) The seed pod of this flower looks like a skull.
Vic Challenger's sidekick in several books
Bright yellow, scientific name after Narcissus