It's Harvest Time
Visitors of all ages will be able to sharpen their planting skills and enjoy fabulous food and drink with the Eden Project’s first-ever harvest celebration from September 8.
The festival will feature an array of activities including bulb-planting workshops, food-themed demonstrations and “ask an expert gardener”, where members of Eden’s acclaimed green team will reveal their tricks of the trade.
Demonstrations of apple-pressing, spice-growing and bread-making will also be taking place as well as displays from community groups for whom plants and gardening have had a positive effect.
There will be the chance to find out about Eden’s local and international gardening programmes and educational charitable work worldwide and in the local community.
Eden’s pollination team will be on hand to discuss issues such as local sourcing, biofuels, climate change and how these will affect us all.
The festivities will celebrate the food grown on our land and the communities who work hard to produce it.
Find out more on our website
The festival will feature an array of activities including bulb-planting workshops, food-themed demonstrations and “ask an expert gardener”, where members of Eden’s acclaimed green team will reveal their tricks of the trade.
Demonstrations of apple-pressing, spice-growing and bread-making will also be taking place as well as displays from community groups for whom plants and gardening have had a positive effect.There will be the chance to find out about Eden’s local and international gardening programmes and educational charitable work worldwide and in the local community.
Eden’s pollination team will be on hand to discuss issues such as local sourcing, biofuels, climate change and how these will affect us all.
The festivities will celebrate the food grown on our land and the communities who work hard to produce it.
Find out more on our website
“My ambition is to introduce the ‘giants of the rainforest’ - trees like the Brazil nut and the dipterocarps from south-east Asia - and cultivate bromeliads and orchids that grow in the rainforest canopy. I’d like to continue the good work of my predecessors and make the Biome as authentic an experience as possible.”
