• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • About
    • Copyright Policy
    • Privacy Policy
  • Surprise Me
  • Recipes
    • By Categories
    • Cake Pan Conversions Calculator
    • Cup – Gram Conversion
    • F.A.Q.
  • Travelogues
    • Travel Map
    • Asia
      • 2014 Ho Chi Minh & Mui Ne, Vietnam (5 days)
      • 2014 East Java, Indonesia (5 days)
      • 2013 Cambodia (7 days)
      • 2012 Taiwan (22 days)
    • Europe
      • 2016 Balkans (25 days)
      • 2016 Switzerland (9 days)
      • 2015 Iceland (22 days)
      • 2015 Denmark (8 days)
      • 2015 Naples and Amalfi Coast, Italy (7 days)
      • 2011 Europe (42 days, 13 countries)
  • Contact

Foodie Baker

Home » Travelogues » Asia » Taiwan » Taiwan 2012 - Sun & Green Leisure Farm

November 15, 2012 Asia

Taiwan 2012 – Sun & Green Leisure Farm

I’m back, and am finally blogging about my Taiwan trip!

After our 42-day trip to Europe, we were craving for another long holiday but as we have already started work, we aren’t able to take so many days of leave. So after some planning, we took 13 days of leave, and with 2 public holidays and 4 weekends, we ended up with 22 days of long holiday, which we decided to take spend it on Taiwan. X planned the whole trip and took almost all the photos during our stay in Taiwan while I’m mostly in charged of deciding where and what to eat… which I love doing haha :p

Our trip in Taiwan was in August, which, to be perfectly honest, is not a great time to go because of the sweltering heat, extremely high humidity, slightly unpredictable weather (sunny in the morning, rainy in the afternoon), rampant mosquitoes and the possibility of typhoons happening. In fact, when we arrived, Typhoon Saola just left Taiwan, so we were really lucky that our plan weren’t delayed because of the typhoon. However, there are still some things that we can only see in August, like the day lilies on Sixty Stone Mountain (which I’ll be blogging about in later posts)

For now, let’s head back to the farm!

Taiwan Sun & Green Farm

Sunflowers standing tall after the “attack” from Typhoon Saola the previous day.

Sunflower is my favourite flower (so bright and cheerful!) and I’ve always wanted to visit a sunflower farm, so Sun & Green Leisure Farm was the first place that we head to upon reaching Taiwan (because it’s located pretty near to the airport). We took a cab from the airport (Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport) to the farm – it was a little hard to find, but there were plenty of signs indicating which way you should go when you’re nearing the farm. It was amazing, being greeted by a field of sunflowers!

At more than 59,000 square metres (more than 635,000 square foot; about 6 hectares), Sun & Green Farm is the largest sunflower farm in Northern Taiwan. Sunflowers commonly grow to heights between 1.5 metres to 3.5 metres (5 to 12 feet). However, the owner (I think only 28 years old or early 30s) of the farm has successfully breed sunflowers that reaches only to our waist (or shorter than that), making it easy for people to bring home the sunflowers.

Taiwan Sun & Green Farm

The sunflowers are very pretty, but I wish to go to a farm in the future where the sunflowers are as tall as me!

Taiwan Sun & Green Farm

Besides the sunflower fields, there are also some benches and tables on fields for family gatherings.

Taiwan Sun & Green Farm

A pond for people to feed the ducks.

Taiwan Sun & Green Farm

Happy ducks swimming around, waiting for people to feed them. They’re so happy-go-lucky and carefree looking!

There are also mini animal farms at the Sun & Green Leisure Farm where goats and rabbits were kept. Animal feed can be bought to feed them.

Taiwan Sun & Green Farm

A speciality the farm sells is the Sunflower Tea (NT50). There’s a small shop just next to the sunflower fields.

Taiwan Sun & Green Farm

Comes in cold or hot, you can customize the drink by choosing the amount of sweetness and ice (normal, 50% or none). We chose 50% sweetness and 50% ice – it was extremely thirst quenching but the taste didn’t wow us (tasted a little like chrysanthemum tea to me).

Taiwan Sun & Green Farm

Mixing the drink!

Taiwan Sun & Green Farm

There’s also a souvenir shop where we came out almost empty-handed, except for a tub of ice cream. There are 4 flavours available: sunflower (wonder how it’ll taste…), lavender, lotus and dragon fruit.

Taiwan Sun & Green Farm

Chose the lavender one! (NT40)

Taiwan Sun & Green Farm

The flavour is pretty subtle, not really my type of ice cream, but a great treat for such hot weather!

Taiwan Sun & Green Farm

And here are the details of the farm!

Sun and Green Leisure Farm (向阳农场)

Address No. 52, Lanpu Village, Guanyin Township, Taoyuan County(桃園縣觀音鄉藍埔村11鄰52號)
Contact number 03-4870629
Opening hours 9am – 6pm (closed on Mondays)They grow different types of sunflowers and other flowers during different seasons, so you can visit the farm all year round!
Admission Free admission all year round
Recommended time 2 to 3 hours
Budget ~NT200 for snacks and drinks(Not sure about lunch and souvenirs)
Website: Sun & Green Leisure Farm (in Chinese only)
How to get there (Chinese version)

1) Cab from Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport (~NT800)
The ride is about 45 minutes to 1 hour. You can also get the driver’s phone number so that you can call him to pick you up later. The people at the farm are very nice, we managed to leave our luggage at the souvenir shop while we walk around the farm.

2) Cab from Taoyuan HSR (~NT550)
Take a HSR (High Speed Rail) from Taipei to Taoyuan for NT155 per person (20 minutes train ride). Get a cab from Taoyuan HSR and cab down to the place.

3) Take the Taoyuan Bus from Zhongli Station (中壢車站) (NT47)
The bus goes from (Jhongli – Sinpo – Guanyin). Alight at TECO Electric shop and take a cab to the farm (unless you want to walk 40 minutes to get there).



Share the love!

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Telegram (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window)

Like this:

Like Loading...

Categories: Asia Tags: taiwan

Previous Post: « Honey-Banana-Nutella Loaf
Next Post: Day Trip out of Taipei – Sandiaoling Waterfall Trail, Shifen Waterfall and Jiufen »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Chan Phooi Fun says

    July 1, 2015 at 5:18 am

    It was a great disappointment! The farm has only a few large sunflowers ( some were almost dried up) left. Later I was informed that you can pick the sunflowers but at a price. There were hardly anything for visitors like me. The ice-cream wasn’t nice. The sunflower tea was a disappointment! Going back was so difficult for us. We took a bus to this farm. My suggestions are , please provide free transport to your farm. Also, have some food/lunch ready. I found out that I could not buy anything because there is nothing to buy (to have my lunch). Thank you.

    Reply
    • Jasline N. says

      July 1, 2015 at 7:12 am

      Hi Phooi Fun, sorry to hear about your bad experience and thank you for sharing it with the readers! I guess a lot must have changed since 2012! 🙁

      Reply
  2. rsmacaalay says

    November 19, 2012 at 2:40 pm

    Very nice photos!

    Reply
  3. kitchen flavours says

    November 16, 2012 at 10:49 pm

    I love sunflowers! And what a view, a field of sunflowers! I once saw an extremely huge sunflower plant, as tall as me and the flower bigger than my face, in Cameron Highlands, that was decades ago, and sadly I do not see it anymore. Lavender ice cream sounds great! I have not been to Taiwan, well, hopefully one day soon!
    Is that you in the last photo! You are a pretty lass! 🙂

    Reply
  4. yummychunklet says

    November 16, 2012 at 1:37 pm

    Yummy looking ice cream.

    Reply
  5. yummychunklet says

    November 15, 2012 at 11:59 am

    What great images!

    Reply
  6. Barbara Bamber | justasmidgen says

    November 15, 2012 at 11:12 am

    How lucky you’ve been able to travel to such a beautiful country! I’d pick that ice cream flavor for sure! Is that you in the last photo in the sunflower field? You’re so beautiful!! xx

    Reply
  7. Zoe says

    November 15, 2012 at 5:19 am

    It was just a year ago that I have visited Taiwan too but with my little boy, we had not gone any place far off Taipei. This sunflower farm looks very pretty… Indeed a very nice place to visit.

    Reply
  8. A_Boleyn says

    November 15, 2012 at 2:47 am

    I loved the pictures of those fields of sunflowers although I’m more familiar with the tall (5″ plus) ones here in Ontario, Canada. And I would have loved to try all 4 of those ice cream flavours … maybe not the lavender but the dragonfruit sounds intriguing.

    Reply

What are you thinking?Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

logo
Food Advertisements by

Popular on Foodie Baker

Mom's Chinese Potato and Minced Pork Stew
Red Date Longan Tea with Goji Berries
3-Minute Easy Chocolate Sauce
My Grandparents' Hokkien Bak Chang (福建咸肉粽 / Glutinous Rice Dumplings)
Stove-Top BBQ Pulled Pork [Bonus Recipe: KFC Coleslaw]
Stove-Top BBQ Pork Ribs
15-Minutes Mushroom Sauce (for Steaks and Mashed Potatoes)
Coffee Butter Cookies [Chinese New Year, Eggless, No-Mixer]
Simplified Nonya Achar/Acar [Spicy Pickled Mixed Vegetables]
Julia Child's Basic Crêpes Recipe (For Both Savoury and Sweet)

Footer

About Foodie Baker

Hi there! I am Foodie Baker - the baker, the cook, the author, the part-time photographer (my husband X takes most of the travel photos), and pretty much the slave behind Foodie Baker. Welcome and I hope you managed to find something you like. :)

stay connected

  • E-mail
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • YouTube

Menu

  • About
  • Recipe Index
  • Cake Pan Conversions Calculator
  • Travelogues

Subscribe via email

Copyright © 2025 Foodie Baker on the Cookd Pro Theme

Scroll Up
%d