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Jump into the dahlias garden at the magical village of Huamantla
MX🎭 Culture13 hr. ago

Jump into the dahlias garden at the magical village of Huamantla

The article promotes the Dalia Garden (Jardín de Dalias Caridad) in the magical town of Huamantla, Tlaxcala, highlighting it as a tourist attraction featuring hundreds of colorful dahlias, Mexico's national flower since 1963. The garden spans 1.5 hectares and includes large-scale floral installations shaped like a comet, water snake, butterflies, and planned depictions of Tláloc, the Mesoamerican rain god. Visitors can explore the garden, take photos, attend workshops, and purchase souvenirs and local crafts. The garden will be open from July 20 to mid-September, with admission fees of 150 pesos for adults and 50 pesos for children.

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El Universal logoEl UniversalIndependentCenterFactual 85Objective 7013 hr. ago
Jump into the dahlias garden at the magical village of Huamantla

The article promotes the Dalia Garden (Jardín de Dalias Caridad) in the magical town of Huamantla, Tlaxcala, highlighting it as a tourist attraction featuring hundreds of colorful dahlias, Mexico's national flower since 1963. The garden spans 1.5 hectares and includes large-scale floral installations shaped like a comet, water snake, butterflies, and planned depictions of Tláloc, the Mesoamerican rain god. Visitors can explore the garden, take photos, attend workshops, and purchase souvenirs and local crafts. The garden will be open from July 20 to mid-September, with admission fees of 150 pesos for adults and 50 pesos for children.

Bias read (Center): The article focuses on promoting a cultural and tourism-related event with no political content or framing. It provides factual information about the garden, its features, and visitor details without any ideological emphasis or biased language.

Why these scores (Factual 85 · Objective 70): The article provides accurate information about the dahlia garden in Huamantla, including historical context about the dahlia as Mexico's national flower since 1963. It mentions the planned 2026 representation of Tláloc and describes the garden's location and features. However, some details like the

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