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Added on the 02/12/2019 14:49:23 - Copyright : Euronews EN
Jerusalem, Oct 6 (EFE / EPA) .- (CAMERA: Abir Sultan) Several artists, including Mohammed Kazem, from the United Arab Emirates, or the trick Refik Anadol presented their new works in the Jerusalem Botanical Gardens in the digital exhibition 'See the invisible.'
Brussels (Belgium), May 1 (EFE) .- (Camera: Leo Rodríguez) After a year hidden due to the pandemic, the most splendid flowers and plants in Belgium, the orange trees, camellias or palm trees that have spread since the 19th century through the greenhouses and gardens of the palace of the king of the Belgians, just recovered their traditional annual meeting with the common people.FOOTAGE OF THE ROYAL CASTLE OF LAEKEN GREENHOUSES IN BRUSSELSSOUNDBITES BY MICHEL DEKENS, PROPERTY MANAGER1.-The greenhouses were built because King Leopold II (1835-1909) wanted them and had a double objective: to receive guests and house his collection of plants.2.- Here we find a great variety of plants, mainly subtropical. There are palm trees, bananas, fig trees ... and next to it we have orange trees, which spend the winter in the greenhouse and which go outside in the summer: orange, lemon, olive trees, laurels.
Johannesburg (South Africa), Dec 22 (EFE / EPA) .- (CAMERA: Kim Ludbrook) Christmas motifs and lights decorate every corner of the Walter Sislulu Botanical Garden in Johannesburg.
Atlanta, May 21 (EFE / EPA) .-The Atlanta Botanical Garden opened its doors on Thursday with a temporary exhibition called "Alice in Wonderland Reimagined". To assist, one must pre-purchase the tickets with an established schedule to reinforce social distancing measures to avoid coronavirus contagion. (Camera: ERIK LESSER) FOOTAGE SHOWS THE ATLANTA BOTANICAL GARDEN.
If you've ever wanted to literally drown in flavour, here's your chance - a hot-pot themed hot-spring has opened up in Chongqing, southwestern China.
Thousands of vacationers attended the sold-out opening event in the Japanese city of Beppu last weekend. The innovative new attraction combines Japanese hot spring bathing culture with rollercoasters and rides of all sizes. It all started with a video project showing hot tub rollercoasters which inspired the city’s mayor, Yasuhiro Nagano, who said the fantasy would become a reality if the video got over a million hits, a figure it exceeded in just three days. The aquatic amusements were funded by voluntary contributions, and 75,000,000 yen, or about $677,000, has been pledged to date.