Zhang, widely regarded as one of the best female amateurs ever, anchors a powerful Stanford team ranked No. Hear from the three-time champion, Rose Zhang, after today’s Stanford Intercollegiate title! #GoStanford /cHYRKMbqSh- Stanford Women's Golf October 17, 2021 “There’s not a lot left on Rose’s amateur resume that she hasn’t checked off, and that reminds us of the Big Cat,” Stanford coach Anne Walker said, referring to Woods (who, for the record, won two of his first three college starts). No previous Cardinal player launched his or her career with three consecutive victories. Then, in less than a month at Stanford, she won her first three college tournaments.
Highschool prodigy full#
Zhang has spent the past 104 weeks, or two full years, atop the world ranking. Stanford freshman Rose Zhang at Siebel Varsity Golf Training Complex. 1-ranked women’s amateur golfer - while acclimating to dormitory life as an 18-year-old college freshman. It’s a natural byproduct of becoming entrenched as the world’s No. “Personally, I just like the idea of growing all kinds of unique plants.Shortly thereafter, upon learning of a Twitter account named “Rose Zhang Tracker” spreading the word about her feats on the course, she offered a bemused smile and said, “Oh, my gosh, that’s so weird.”Įven so, Zhang acknowledged she’s cool with the rising attention. And many studies show that plants can help benefit mental health. Maybe it’s because of the idea of being responsible and taking care of something - without having to put an animal or child’s life at risk.
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“Why do people like plants? That’s hard to answer. They exploded after the lockdowns,” Soule said. In the fall, he plans to attend Kalamazoo Valley Community College with hopes of eventually earning a horticulture degree from Michigan State University. He hopes to parlay that popularity into a business of some sort, perhaps starting an Etsy plant shop. He said he is a little surprised by the success of his TikTok. He’ll occasionally address issues such as negative comments about his voice or his lack of knowledge about some things with a disarming honesty, saying that his voice makes him unique and he’s proud of having room to grow and learn more. Some of the videos offer plant-related humor - such as when he stops his aunt from tossing the dregs of her wine glass into a plant pot or when he reacts with horror to atrocities such as people giving their Venus flytrap toothpaste. In his videos, he documents his own adventures as a plant owner, while also answering questions from plant parents who share videos of their droopy or browning plants. He tries to post one to three times a day. He has always been interested in influencer culture, he said, and he first launched a YouTube channel after being inspired by one of his favorite YouTubers. TikTok was not his first foray into social media. He currently has about 100 plants ranging from philodendron micans to desert roses and hoya to several carnivorous pitcher plants - which he now grows quite successfully. But, it sprang back to life in 2017 when his current collection began to grow. Like some plant species, his interest in plants went dormant in about 2015. “They’re not that tricky if you know what you’re doing - and I didn’t know what I was doing when I was 9 or 10 years old.” “I got a Venus flytrap and a pitcher plant, but they all died,” he said.
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When he was in second grade he read a book that piqued his interest in carnivorous plants - and he bought his first one. He can remember picking daisies with his grandmother. Soule, who has autism, has attended Kalamazoo Public Schools since second grade, attending Indian Prairie, KingWestwood, Hillside and Kalamazoo Central. His brothers Elliot - the one in the TikTok video - and Spencer will be rising freshmen at Kalamazoo Central in the fall. Soule, 19, is the son of Katie and Ryan Soule. I didn’t have success at first, but after December, I got the ball rolling.”
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I tried to get big on TikTok to prove him wrong. “He was joking about being TikTok famous. It got half a million views,” Soule said. “My brother told me that he was in a viral video that a friend had made. Like many things in life, his TikTok fame grew out of a sibling rivalry. His Plant Prodigy account has amassed almost 500,000 followers and his short, entertaining, and informative videos about all things plants have more than 8.6 million likes. When people ask Kalamazoo Central High School graduate Jacob Soule what he did during the COVID pandemic, he has a more interesting answer than most.