Having celebrated its 10th birthday, and with over a million visitors last year, you may have already visited the Eden Project. If you haven't yet been, I can thoroughly recommend it. It's both fascinating and thought provoking.
Ambling around the Grow Zone:
should encourage people to grow their own:
especially with vegetables as pretty as this chard:
In the 1300s we used around a teaspoon a year, now it's 35kg. Do we want diabetes, obesity and poor teeth, or should we use this crop for fuel?
There was a good choice for lunch! The Eden Project has teamed up with Town Mill Bakery in Lyme Regis to create the Eden Bakery:
I was tempted to go for a pizza, which you could see being made:
but chose a very tasty vegetable Frittata instead:
In the Mediterranean Biome:
there was a rather fine display of different varieties of chillies:
They were ranked by the number of Scoville heat units (SHU):
I'd give the Dorset Naga a wide berth if I were you!
I thought the WEEE man was awful:
and then found he was made from all the Waste Electrical and Electronic
Equipment that one person throws away in a lifetime (around 3.3 tonnes)!
On the way out there's a shop:
where you can buy bread from the Eden bakery:
Also in the shop there was a good selection of herb plants to buy:
and some attractive chilli plants:
there was also Cornish chilli sauce:
and, if your throat is burning after all that chilli, Cornish cider from Cornish Orchards:
They sold Cornish food like fudge, and fairings:
and local fruit (and clotted cream to go with it), Cornish cheese and smoked food from Tregida Smokehouse:
Eden Project
Bodelva
Cornwall
PL24 2SG
Tel: 01726 811911
Web: www.edenproject.com
Shop: www.edenproject.com/shop/Food-and-Drink.aspx
Ambling around the Grow Zone:
should encourage people to grow their own:
especially with vegetables as pretty as this chard:
There's information about the Heritage Seed Library and demonstration plots of traditional varieties:
Inside the Rainforest Biome:
you can find out about life in the Humid Tropic Regions. You can see that chocolate does grow on trees:
and why peanuts are called ground nuts:
You can see spices like cardamon growing:
and find out how where you buy your coffee from can affect peoples lives and the planet:
I learnt that seven million people are employed world wide in the sugar industry:In the 1300s we used around a teaspoon a year, now it's 35kg. Do we want diabetes, obesity and poor teeth, or should we use this crop for fuel?
It took a long time to walk around the Rainforest Biome, which makes the fact that man destroys an equivalent area of primary forest every 10 seconds all the more worrying...
There was a good choice for lunch! The Eden Project has teamed up with Town Mill Bakery in Lyme Regis to create the Eden Bakery:
I was tempted to go for a pizza, which you could see being made:
but chose a very tasty vegetable Frittata instead:
In the Mediterranean Biome:
there was a rather fine display of different varieties of chillies:
They were ranked by the number of Scoville heat units (SHU):
I'd give the Dorset Naga a wide berth if I were you!
I thought the WEEE man was awful:
and then found he was made from all the Waste Electrical and Electronic
Equipment that one person throws away in a lifetime (around 3.3 tonnes)!
On the way out there's a shop:
where you can buy bread from the Eden bakery:
Also in the shop there was a good selection of herb plants to buy:
and some attractive chilli plants:
there was also Cornish chilli sauce:
and, if your throat is burning after all that chilli, Cornish cider from Cornish Orchards:
They sold Cornish food like fudge, and fairings:
and local fruit (and clotted cream to go with it), Cornish cheese and smoked food from Tregida Smokehouse:
Eden Project
Bodelva
Cornwall
PL24 2SG
Tel: 01726 811911
Web: www.edenproject.com
Shop: www.edenproject.com/shop/Food-and-Drink.aspx
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