Vegetable expedition | A mysterious ephemeral greenhouse at the Botanical Garden





A flying greenhouse, propelled by the electrical energy provided by its plants, mysteriously landed in the heart of the Botanical Garden overnight from Sunday to Monday. Fantasy or reality?

Posted at 11:00 a.m.

Mary Tison

Mary Tison
The Press

“It was not easy,” said the head of the Aérofloral II mission, the FD commander, during a press conference Monday morning. “The weather conditions were not to our advantage, and a depression caused by the high temperatures of the day disrupted our approach by creating violent turbulence. »

The crew still managed to maneuver and land in a clearing near the Japanese Garden.

“Unfortunately, we landed hard and ran over a squirrel. We are sorry, I know they are rare here. »

  • A

    PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

    A “flying” greenhouse has nestled near the Japanese Garden in the Botanical Garden.

  • Large balloons top the structure.

    PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

    Large balloons top the structure.

  • The greenhouse is full of plants.

    PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

    The greenhouse is full of plants.

  • A machine to tell stories to plants

    PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

    A machine to tell stories to plants

  • The crew members show great seriousness in their experiments.

    PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

    The crew members show great seriousness in their experiments.

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This version of events can be questioned. You can also play the game. This is what the director of the Botanical Garden, Anne Charpentier, suggested, welcoming this contribution of magic and fantasy.

We started tackling this approach to fantasy with the Jardin de l’Étrange last winter. We like to mix reality and fantasy. With plants, it is something that lends itself well.

Anne Charpentier, Director of the Botanical Garden

What is real is the towering, multi-story structure, perched on four spidery legs, laden with plants and fans, topped with large balloons. Crew members climb up and down using a ladder and ropes.

All around, they have placed a large number of machines with the most diverse purposes: one is used to caress the plants, another to talk to them and listen to them, yet another is used to make the apples blush.


PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

A machine for stroking plants

The crew members are happy to explain, in the most serious way, the why and how of these experiences. They can invite visitors to participate.

This is how 6-year-old Jean reads a passage from the classic children’s book The Return of the Black Stallion in a kind of funnel which distributes the sound, through large pipes, to half a dozen small vegetable gardens on wheels. A crew member conscientiously measures the energy circulating in one of the plants to write it down in a large notebook.

plant energy

The underlying theme of the entire Aérofloral II mission (entitled Plant Expedition) is phytovoltaic energy, the energy provided by plants. The healthier a plant is (we talk to it, caress it, play music to it), the more energy it will be able to provide.

This is also the reason for the presence of Aérofloral II in Canada, according to Commander FD (he prefers to remain anonymous to, he says, protect himself from powerful oil lobbies). There are things to discover.

“Here, the plants have the capacity to develop very quickly because they have a very long winter. As these plants manage to complete their cycle in a very short way, they have a great energy capacity. »


PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

The FD commander meets the journalists after the “landing”.

The goal of all this research is that one day it will be possible to plug your electric bike directly into a maple tree to be able to recharge it, continues Commander FD, who draws a sketch in his notebook to make it clear how it works. phytovoltaism.

The Aérofloral II crew will be present from July 18 to 31 at the Botanical Garden. However, he will take a break on July 20, 21, 26 and 27.

A team of animators from the Botanical Garden will then take over. “They will talk about the same themes, but in a more… verified way, a little less whimsical,” says Mme Carpenter.

According to the version of the FD commander, the Aérofloral II has already circumnavigated the world three times and comes directly from Greenland, where the crew studied seeds buried in the permafrost. However, the labels sewn on the sleeves of the crew members mention the home port of the flying greenhouse, La Machine, in Nantes. But one can choose to stick to the FD commander’s version.

Learn more

  • 17
    Number of people who form the crew of Aérofloral II

    Source: Plant Expedition

    5000 to 6000 meters
    Altitude at which the Aérofloral II flies (according to the fanciful version of the FD commander)

    Source: Plant Expedition


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