And now, if I can remember how, MORE Floriade

17 Jun

We happily interrupted our picture posting for dinner with friends and now we have returned — yes, folks, it’s that dreaded obligation: looking at people’s vacation pictures!

This sign was in Almere Centre (the downtown), which, as far as we could tell is a huge open-air mall of shops; one arm of it is full of more upscale restaurants rather than the (mostly American) fast food places scattered around. They do have a very big farmer’s market.
Since pics don’t come into wordpress in order, this is part of the Bistro In Vitro exhibit
And here it is, see-through sushi
Jonelle comments on not being a big fan of the bistro in vitro foods. This knitted meat was kinda creepy.
WARNING: they don’t look like oysters, they look like kidneys on the half shell (see below or close your eyes and skip) — I’d have to be pretty damn hungry, as in starving, to eat these I think
See more detail later
This doesn’t look too bad
OK, also pretty gross — it was one sick puppy who thought up these! the one on the right is Einstein, I think
Another one I don’t believe I’d be ordering at the Bistro In Vitro!
Who likes meat ice cream??!? Though I love rye bread ice cream, at least at Loki Cafe in Reykjavik
pretty interesting, huh?
This is a hoot!
But look pretty appetizing I’d say
Yeah the stainless steel cow cheese pics are definitely not in order
this is the stainless steel cow
Here’s a sad future! Coffee, bananas and avocados are cash crops and, as best I can figure, the land currently used for these cash crops will be needed to crop grains and vegetables for domestic uses.
Mango leather — looked cool
thought this was a great bench. Kate — we could do something like this with your black walnut log.
This is the Italian garden — for some reason I don’t remember we couldn’t get into their pavilion
This and next few are the UAE pavilion. There may be application of this research for New Mexico. We certainly have a lot of saline water and lots of sun and wind
We think this may be the Cyprus or Yemen exhibit. No signage, so it’s still a mystery.
This is one of the backsides of the Italian garden
Laird’s tenderloin tataki appetizer at the Dutch
my Jeruselem artichoke — OMG, it was so good!
Laird’s asparagus — good but not as good as Jonelle’s sea bream
my ohso fantastic sea bream — the sweet potatoes were gorgeous and delicious!
Note the pea garnish
Laird had cheesecake and it was really good
I had parsley ice cream. Yeah, not a fan — where’s the rye bread ice cream?!?
We need to look at this website. We scanned the QR codes for a lot of additional information, but we were suffering a lot of information overload.
I think this is side of a bridge — interesting. It was some sort of reed woven into the structure of the bridge.
They rarely labeled flowers, so I didn’t know what most of the were
this was in the Indian pavilion, which was really mostly a store
Isn’t she beautiful — boy did I want her!
This was amazing — it took 2 1/2 years to make! if you can’t tell, it is embroidery.
This website is VERY interesting — innovative building materials and methods — we encourage you to go look
Lots of birds. I think these may be Egyptian geese
There were two of these robots, one sorta at each end of the Floriade — we never saw the one we saw everyday coming in from the lake move; this one was moving, but part of its arm detached and so the mechanism moved without the arm. Notice the headdress.
Her eyes moved, too — a little creepy
Who is that old guy? Me taking a selfie.
What a cool idea — planting on the sides of bridges
the walkway and bridge was changed to curve so as to not disturb a beaver lodge somewhere here that we could not see
other people looking for the beaver lodge, too. But mostly, closer shot of the bridge planter
Alliums were everywhere
this is the bldg with the green roof I showed you from the cable car
have you guessed what it’s made of — this is a test: I told you about it in another blog post
Ta Dah!
Isn’t it simply BRILLIANT?!?
and this is the back side
Natural dyes in water
I want a wall like this! Actually, I want the whole pavilion, it could be like a summer kitchen in our meadow
We just loved the amount of monumental art on the grounds.
The back side of the wool growers pavilion — probably our favorite individual organization pavilion, although the Chinese pavilion was so far over the top because of the grounds and plantings.
Isn’t this cool?!? Imagine a combination of veggies and flowers
There were lots of bees and lots of bee houses — the bees were busy and very mellow, paid no attention to us humans
Chris… we should set up a factory to make these fittings…
This was also really neat, a sculpture/bench/planter/summer bed(?)
colored metal
A tiny house; love the fencing
I don’t know about the photos, but this is part of the arboretum — trees were planted in alphabetical order! Makes it easier for future horticultural research is what I think we were told — they are catalogued and there will be a horticulture library in Flores (the bldg with the great art facade near the bee-made Welcome guys)
what a cute idea for a swing — obviously not for us, all we have are pinons and junipers; no tree swing for us
Another bridge — this time, bent rebar.
another great bench; don’t know how comfy though
All the gardens were planted in what I think is called French Intensive — meaning very dense, plants close together; more water efficient
Jonelle and her very well-mannered new friend.
Amazing what you can do when and where water is not an issue.
building a copy of this chair is now # 1,234 on my personal project bucket list.
This was in the Peace Garden — this part was about famous (and perhaps not-so-famous) historical figures who had been what I will call “peace pioneers”, cause I started to say “fought for peace” but that sounded oxymoronic. I walked around the circle and took a video of the significant peace personalities. You can see a few in the background of this still pic.
These trees are part of research on trees in urban environments
Want this living wall — actually more like living structure since it’s two sided
This is hard to see, but VERY COOL — this is the lake we crossed every day and the structure (that is not a power line) is a water ski run — you hook onto it and it pulls you around a very large area (that includes ski jumps for those so inclined) so you can ski without having to own a boat or know someone who does — also, I assume, means more environmentally friendly and safer than lots of ski boats running around
I think this was the Dutch Innovations bldg — what amazing thinking & innovating they are doing!
This was the virtual reality hot air balloon ride we took (twice) over Flavoland — IT WAS SO COOL!
there was no explanation of this, but I reckon it must be some kind of stacked garden for indoors
a kiddie play area, one of several throughout the park
the hop on/hop off “train” seen through the windows of a restaurant bldg
sculpture/exhibit about figuring out your carbon footprint
kiddie play area
I don’t remember this, but it’s pretty
this is walking to the next picture
this was a fountain that “showed” the cumulative heartbeat of Almere and visitors — you put your hands on a rail and it would chart your heart beats (or something like that — the ferry driver told us in a kind of garbled way and there was no English signage). Anyway, it wasn’t a permanent installation and we went on the last day — actually we were there for its LAST GASP!
This is a picture of a picture of Almere
Laird becoming fast friends at the Bangladesh pavilion
Turkey garden in shape of its flag
I have no idea whether people with touch screens can make all these signs big enough to read, but this tells about making flavoland province from the sea in the 1970s — and shows some of the equipment they used
This was the gorgeous Chakra garden, with the outer garden planted in the same color as its corresponding pole
the center fountain
this is an energy- and materials-efficient tiny vacation home
covered in ceramic tile
think this was furniture made from plastic, but not really sure — I meant to feel it but forgot to
nice bathroom, but the sink is too little
LOVE THE LIGHTS
this is the kid’s room in the more traditional vacation house that had been “future-proofed” — I have no idea why we don’t have the pics of the living-dining-kitchen
I would have helped paint if it were possible for me to get down on my knees anymore!
This exhibit was about Hortus, the new Almere district that will be created from the Floriade, but I don’t think all the photos downloaded — Laird was having a terrible time trying to move photos from phone to computer to here
This is going to be a mostly wooden apartment bldg
this round bldg held the completely incomprehensible films we told you about in an earlier blog posting
one of the asparagus men
last day, last visit to the greenhouse on the way to our last ferry ride back to hotel
THE END (unless we find more photos!)

2 Responses to “And now, if I can remember how, MORE Floriade”

  1. Louise Ladd's avatar
    Louise Ladd June 18, 2022 at 1:36 pm #

    Glad I won’t be around for that disgusting looking food!!🤮

    Sent from my iPhone

    >

    • lairdandjonelle's avatar
      lairdandjonelle June 18, 2022 at 3:10 pm #

      Well, I assume the worst of the ideas, Celebrity Bites, will be available only to the rich — they’ll be able to choose to have lunch WITH a celebrity or lunch OF a celebrity! Clearly, though, GMO is only the first (baby) step. Did you read the article in the New Mexican this morning about the big benefits of using human urine as fertilizer, as a much better alternative to commercial nitrogin, phosphorus and potassium (?) fertilizers? Research in Niger demonstrated a yield increase of 30% on millet — I find that a better alternative than celebrity bites – and, hey, we all gotta pee — might as well make it count!

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