Home / Travel / Travel

Food and flower festivals brighten the winter days

By Li Xinzhu in Shanghai | China Daily | Updated: 2013-01-14 17:17
Food and flower festivals brighten the winter days

An iconic wintersweet flower arrangement is a centerpiece of the Guyi Garden show. Provided to China Daily

Shanghai has launched a host of outdoor activities recently to cheer people up during the recent spell of bitter winter weather.

Food and flower festivals brighten the winter days

Shanghai Guyi Garden in Jiading district, for instance, has unveiled its flower fair, featuring winter species such as narcissus, orchids, azaleas and wintersweet.

It is intended to provide entertainment for the Chinese New Year crowds and will stay open till the end of February.

The centerpiece of the fair is a flower arrangement made of twigs cut from a 270-year-old wintersweet tree planted in suburban Waigang.

Another eye-catcher is Chongming narcissus, one of Shanghai's representative flowers and a star exhibit at the 2011 Taiwan International Flower Expo.

In former times, people would cut narcissus and wintersweet and put them in a porcelain vase - which signified "saving a jar of warmth for winter" and was thought to be propitious.

Food and flower festivals brighten the winter days

Wintry wonderland

Other highlights are flower-arranging artists who turn vegetables such as onions and kumquat into the likenesses of flowers.

Other parks with flower shows include Shanghai Botanical Garden, Chenshan Botanical Garden and Binjiang Forest Park.

In Jinshan district, however, the focus is on food rather than flowers. The 2013 Jinshan Strawberry Festival started on Jan 3 and people are encouraged to pick fresh strawberries.

A photography competition and strawberry culture promotions will take place throughout the festival.

lixinzhu@chinadaily.com.cn