Queen of the Night, selenicerus, grandiflorus, bouquet, scent, strange, bizarre, spineless, succulent, floral, stamen, flowering, nocturnal, nocturnal, flowering, radiant, radiance, travel, tourism, tourist, united states of America, u.s.a., Deer-Horn Cactus, Peniocereus greggii_(Cereus greggii), strangest, strange, rarely, rare, wild, inconspicuous, one midsummer's night each year, exquisite scented, open, opens at night, closes in the morning, Sonora and Chihuahua deserts of southern Arizona, east to western Texas, south to northern Mexico, June or July, waxy, creamy-white, red-orange, short-spine elliptical fruit, sparse, angular, lead-gray, twiggy stems, tuberous, turnip-like root, rock gardens, can be grown from stem cuttings, protected in certain desert areas, and permits may be required to collect them, intoxicating scent, Apple, Blooming, Cereus, Latin, Night, Peru, Peruvian, Peruvians, attractive, beautiful, beauty, biotope, bloom, blooming, blooms, blossom, blossoms, botanical, botany, cacti, cactus, cereus, close, close, up, close, ups, close-up, close-ups, detail, details, exotic, fair, flourish, fragrant trumpet-shaped flowers, flower, desert, garden, horticulture, nature, natural, botanical, botany, beauty, radiant, blossom, openness, pure, plant, plants, petal, petals, night blooming, detail, horizontal