Daisies and sunflowers blooming in Gia Lai “attract” guests to check-in

These days, the family of Mr. Le Van Thiet (born 1960, alley 227 Ngo Quyen, village 1, Bien Ho commune, Pleiku city) is busy taking care of the colorful flower garden.

< p>Mr. Thiet said that for many years, his family has often chosen flower varieties from the North such as daisies and buckwheat to plant in the garden.

This year, Mr. Thiet sowed nearly 5,000 daisies on an area of ​​nearly 2 acres. In addition to daisies, he also grows other flowers such as immortelle daisies, daisies, mustard flowers, bougainvillea flowers… to give tourists more choices when visiting.

Because flowers originate from the North, growing in the Central Highlands faces many difficulties. In order for the flowers to bloom at the beginning of the year, Mr. Thiet had to turn on the electricity at night during the first month for the plants to grow and develop.

After 3 months of diligence, the nightingale garden began to bud. At the beginning of spring, Mr. Thiet opened the door for people in the area to come and enjoy check-in.

I planted a flower garden This is with the desire to create more destinations for tourists to enjoy at the beginning of the year. To grow flower gardens like this requires a lot of passion and fertilizer costs… After many failures, I am very excited because the flowers bloom beautifully at the right time for people to admire and take photos,” Mr. Thiet said.

Mr. Thiet confided that Pleiku’s cool climate is quite cold at times, suitable for daisies.

Mr. Thiet’s flower garden welcomed hundreds of visitors to take photos. Ms. Le Ngoc Han (Chu Pah district, Gia Lai province) was excited: “I often see daisies in Hanoi, but Gia Lai has never seen anyone planting them. Now there is a strangely beautiful flower garden so women don’t have to go all the way to the North.” to take pictures to admire.

Similarly, Mr. Le Van Truong also took advantage of a few acres of land in Dong Xanh Park (located in An Phu commune, Pleiku city, Gia Lai province) to plant a garden of sunflowers, buckwheat butterflies, and butterfly petals. …

The flower garden is complemented by a park landscape imbued with identity culture The Central Highlands is associated with spiritual culture towards the roots. Especially in the park, there is also a majestic statue of the Hung King, carved from wood, 6m high and weighing nearly 3 tons, in front of the shrine, which is the majestic statue of 18 Hung kings.

The ethnic cultural area is methodically invested with indigenous architecture such as: communal house, long house, stilt house, rice warehouse, house tombs of T’rung musical instruments and hundreds of statues simulating the daily life and production of ethnic minorities in the Central Highlands.