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‘It calms you right down': U-pick flower farms a relaxing trip

‘It calms you right down': U-pick flower farms a relaxing trip

Global News5 days ago
Jamie Carels of Charlie May Farm has operated a U-pick flower garden for the past three summers.
'We start in the wintertime, basically right after Christmas, and just the process of planting the seed indoors, bring it out here, and then just watching this full display come to life… it's such a invigorating thing to experience,' she said.
Watch the video above to learn about the D-I-Y experience that's gaining popularity.
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‘It calms you right down': U-pick flower farms a relaxing trip
‘It calms you right down': U-pick flower farms a relaxing trip

Global News

time5 days ago

  • Global News

‘It calms you right down': U-pick flower farms a relaxing trip

Jamie Carels of Charlie May Farm has operated a U-pick flower garden for the past three summers. 'We start in the wintertime, basically right after Christmas, and just the process of planting the seed indoors, bring it out here, and then just watching this full display come to life… it's such a invigorating thing to experience,' she said. Watch the video above to learn about the D-I-Y experience that's gaining popularity.

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Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account For decades, the tinkling of Beethoven's 'Fur Elise' or Tekla Badarzewska-Baranowska's 'Maiden's Prayer' has alerted Taiwanese households to take out their garbage. Like clockwork, residents emerge from their apartment buildings carrying bags of pre-sorted rubbish as the musical garbage trucks approach. 'When we hear this music, we know it's time to take out the trash. It's very convenient,' 78-year-old Lee Shu-ning told AFP as she waited outside her tower block in Taipei. Residents toss plastic bags of general refuse into the yellow compaction truck, and tip food waste and recycling into bins carried by another vehicle. For the elderly, taking out the trash has become a social event and many arrive early to sit and talk around the collection points. 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