Sunday, November 4, 2012

A Pilgrimage to Tianwei: Central Taiwan’s Commercial Gardening Center


Tianwei:  Taiwan’s Commercial Gardening Center

The built environments of Taiwanese cities provide their residents with very limited access to green spaces.  For those raised on the farms and in the villages of the fertile plains of central Taiwan the price of admission to urban life is questionable.  They lament the dwindling rural landscape, I suspect, in the vein of Joni Mitchell’s, “They Paved Paradise:” ‘you don’t know what you got till it’s gone.’ The productivity of the soil holds a revered place for them, if only in the modest form of houseplants.

 A trip to Tianwei, Central Taiwan’s premier commercial gardening center, is in this sense a pilgrimage.  The planned section of the township has many side attractions for less committed visitors – dramatic fountains, rides for the kids, performing artists, pedal surreys, and food vendors –packed around centralized parking lots. The commercial nurseries and plant stores are located along the main road and lanes radiating from this busy hub.



The biggest attractions are the nurseries selling bonsai. The original Chinese term, punjai, refers to the miniaturization of landscapes in pots.

Yet these hand-crafted horticultural gems, priced in man-years of labor, are scarcely affordable.  Similar sculpted flowering shrubs, ranging from about two-feet to ten-feet tall, are even more tempting. Understandably these giants attract more gawkers and photographers than buyers.



One could spend hours selecting plants, 
                            but the nurseries close at dark.

                                       
               

I brought home several cacti, mint and lavender herbs, and a prolific chili pepper plant.


                          





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